The presidential elections in Iraq are proven more Kurdish tension

The presidential elections in Iraq are proven more Kurdish tension

With the election of a republican president yesterday, Iraq put an end to a protracted year of disagreements and waiting after three failed efforts.
He competed for the presidency with the fierceness of the main Kurdistan party, namely the Kurdistan Democratic Party, which supported Abd al -Latif Rashid, and its traditional rival, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, which nominated the current President Barham Saleh.

Rashid’s victory, however, heightened worries about the intensification of hostilities between the two parties, which engaged in a civil war in the 1990s.
especially when he was unable to resolve disagreements and choose a single candidate.
In the context, Zamani Ali Salim, assistant professor of political science at a university in Sulaymaniyah, told Reuters on Friday that “the relationship between the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and Democratic is at its lowest levels.

” However, he ruled out that the tension would lead to the interruption of the relationship between the two parties, likely that the conflict will end in the end, because Rashid is a member of the National Union, and his wife is a strong figure within the party.
A year after the parliamentary elections, the Iraqi parliament yesterday chose the Kurdish leader to lead the nation as president, clearing the path for the establishment of a new administration.

Rashid, 78, a British-educated engineer who previously served as the country’s minister of water resources from 2003 to 2010, is noteworthy.

Iraq’s presidential elections have increased Kurdish tension, it has been shown.

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