The Niagara Falls Review

Diplomat says Iraqi Kurds want same right to self-determinat­ion as Quebecers

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — A senior representa­tive for Iraq’s Kurdish region is defending her people’s plan to hold a referendum on independen­ce, saying they simply want to exercise the same right to self-determinat­ion as Quebecers.

Tensions in Iraq are mounting after the country’s semi-autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government in Erbil announced earlier this month plans to hold the long-promised referendum on Sept. 25.

Planning is now underway, despite fierce objections from Iraq’s central government in Baghdad, as well as varying degrees of opposition from the U.S., the European Union and most of Iraq’s neighbours.

Bayan Sami Abdul Rahman, the Kurdish government’s top diplomat in Washington, said her people have tried to live and work with the rest of Iraq, but Baghdad has chosen not to co-operate.

She cited a number of examples to illustrate the point: recent reports of the central government cutting off supplies of medicine to the Kurds, restrictio­ns on Kurdish oil exports and a failure to resolve long-standing land disputes with Erbil.

“We have done our best to be partners in Iraq; it has not worked,” Rahman said in an interview with The Canadian Press.

“We believe this is the right time to allow the people of Kurdistan to exercise their democratic right, a right that people across the world have, to express their self-determinat­ion.”

She also cited what she called historic injustices perpetrate­d upon Iraqi Kurds, including the killing of thousands of Kurds by Saddam Hussein, as well as forced displaceme­nts and disappeara­nces.

Canada has said little about the planned referendum, despite the fact Canadian soldiers have partnered almost exclusivel­y with the Kurdish peshmerga in the fight against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

Asked about the issue last week, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said: “A unified Iraq is what we believe is the long-term solution. But ultimately these decisions have to be made by the Iraqi people, and the Kurds themselves.”

Rahman linked Canada’s reticence to weigh in on Kurdistan’s aspiration­s for independen­ce to the fact it offers an uncomforta­ble echo of the onagain, off-again debate about sovereignt­y in Quebec.

“As a state that has its own province of Quebec that has exercised the right to hold a referendum, I think it would be difficult for Canada to deny that right to the people of Kurdistan,” she said.

Yet she also cautioned against comparison­s between the two,, calling Iraq’s situation “a different kettle of fish” because of the tense relationsh­ip between Erbil and Baghdad.

“Ottawa would never think to cut off the medicine supply to one of its provinces, even if it was a province that was a thorn in its side,” she said. “We’re trying to have an amicable divorce from Iraq. But this is not the same as Quebec having an amicable divorce from Canada.”

Many observers say it is past time the world’s 30 million Kurds had their own country; some even say they have earned it with their efforts in the fight against the Islamic State group.

But while the U.S. and the EU are among those that have recognized the Kurds’ legitimate aspiration­s for self-determinat­ion, there are fears a vote now would detract from the anti-ISIL effort.

Part of the reason is because the vote will be held in Iraq’s so-called disputed territorie­s, which includes the oil-rich city of Kirkuk, and whose ownership is claimed by both Baghdad and Erbil.

Iraq’s neighbours, meanwhile, worry that any move towards independen­ce by Iraq’s Kurds, who number about 8 million, will lead to similar demands by the Kurdish population­s within their borders.

Rahman dismissed suggestion­s the referendum be delayed until after ISIL is defeated, saying there is no guarantee the internatio­nal community would support it even then.

And while confident, like many observers, that Kurds would vote overwhelmi­ngly for independen­ce from Iraq, Rahman said any actual split from the rest of the country would come through negotiatio­ns.

To that end, rather than simply standing by and watching, she said Canada could help oversee a peaceful divorce between the two sides.

“We believe that the best way to reach our desired goal is to have a negotiated settlement with Baghdad, and a negotiated settlement means dialogue,” she said.

“Encourage Baghdad to talk to us. Encourage us to talk to Baghdad in such a way that both sides can have a win-win result. If Canada can play that role, of course we would welcome it.”

 ?? SAFIN HAMED/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Iraqi Kurdish leader Massud Barzani, left, welcomes Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan last July in in Arbil, the capital of the Kurdish autonomous region in Northern Iraq.
SAFIN HAMED/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Iraqi Kurdish leader Massud Barzani, left, welcomes Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan last July in in Arbil, the capital of the Kurdish autonomous region in Northern Iraq.

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