Twittersphere reacts with anger, hope, humour to Barham Salih news

19-09-2018
Rudaw
Tags: Barham Salih Iraq president PUK CDJ Erbil-Baghdad Twitter social media
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ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – The announcement that Barham Salih will be the PUK’s candidate for the post of Iraqi president was greeted with anger by many on social media while others expressed hope that his international reputation and experience would bring a steady hand to tumultuous Baghdad. 

Some took to the social media platform to call Salih out for perceived opportunism, noting he had just recently been campaigning against PUK and KDP corruption:


Salih, a former senior leadership member of the PUK, left the party last year and formed the Coalition for Democracy and Justice (CDJ) with an anti-corruption pledge of “real change and reform.”

The party secured two seats in the Iraqi parliamentary election in May but withdrew from the race for the Kurdistan Region parliament, citing concerns about the accuracy of the voter list.

With his party on the decline, some Twitter users reasoned Salih had made a pragmatic decision and his experience will benefit Kurds in Baghdad: 


While many Kurds have expressed disappointment ranging to anger over Salih’s political maneuvering, voices out of the rest of Iraq are more hopeful:


Some speculate that Salih will secure the support of two-thirds of the parliament that is needed to elect the president, garnering votes from non-Kurdish MPs:


Salih, a known figure internationally from his time as deputy prime minister of Iraq from 2006 to 2009 and prime minister of the Kurdistan Region from 2001 to 2004, could also get backing from international allies, others mused:


The post of president of Iraq has been allocated to the Kurds as part of power-sharing in post-Saddam Hussein Iraq. An agreement between the PUK and the KDP has given the position to the PUK with the KDP taking the presidency of the Kurdistan Region. This time around, however, KDP has said they will nominate a candidate of their own for the Iraqi presidency.

With all the political jostling in Baghdad and Erbil, this Twitter user summed things up:


Hopefully Iraqi government formation won’t get as physical as the WWE (World Wrestling Entertainment). 

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