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Iraqi Kurdish PUK Security Force Alleges a plot to kill Party Leader

The Patriotic Union of Kurdistan in Iraq's semiautonomous Kurdistan Region said that on Wednesday they had discovered a plot against PUK leader Pavel Talabani. They shared a video purporting to show six guards claiming they received an order to murder him.

A PUK-affiliated Kurdistan security service broadcast the video in which the fighters described their plans to rent a flat in a highrise building close to the PUK leader’s headquarters. The footage showed snipers holding silencers near a window that overlooked the office of the PUK leader.

The guards on the video claim that they were given their orders by Lahur Talabani. Lahur Talabani is a prominent Kurdish political figure who is the cousin and leader of the People's Front, the party of opposition to Pavel Talabani.

The office of Lahur Talabani was not immediately accessible for comment. A member of People's Front has accused the PUK using security and judicial institutions to suppress political opponents.

Lahur Talabani, a fighter loyal to Lahur Talabani, was arrested by PUK forces on Friday after they raided an hotel in Sulaymaniya on Thursday night and fought for four hours. Three PUK commandos, as well as two Lahur Talabani fighters, were reported dead by police and hospital sources.

According to security officials, more than 160 Lahur Talabani loyalists have been detained with him.

Officials from the Sulaymaniya court confirmed that a warrant had been issued for Lahur Tallahani on charges of destabilizing security in the city and attempted murder. Sources familiar said that the arrest was part a larger struggle to control Sulaymaniya. This is a stronghold for the PUK.

Lahur Talabani had been the joint president of PUK before a power battle led to his removal in 2021.

The representative of the People's Front, who spoke under condition of anonymity for fear of arrest, said that "deploying tanks and hundreds armored cars to arrest a leader of a political party is completely unrelated to legal methods or democratic methods."

This is the most serious conflict between Kurdish groups in Iraq since Saddam Hussein's fall in 2003.

Regional officials and analysts are concerned that the violence could threaten the relative peace enjoyed by Iraq's semiautonomous Kurdish Region, which had largely been insulated from other areas of unrest in the country. (Reporting and editing by Rosalba o'Brien, Ahmed Rasheed)

(source: Reuters)