Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Erdogan: Kurdish referendum ‘treachery’; Iraq rules out talks on independen­ce

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Turkey has accused the head of Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region of “treachery” for pursuing an independen­ce referendum, while the Iraqi government has threatened to ban flights into Kurdish regional airports, according to a Radio Free Europe report.

The rhetoric from both Ankara and Baghdad on Tuesday ratcheted up pressure on the Kurdish region following the referendum vote a day earlier.

Initial results showed 72% of eligible voters took part and an overwhelmi­ng majority, possibly over 90%, said “Yes,” according to Kurdish television Rudaw. Final results were expected on Wednesday.

Some 30 million ethnic Kurds live in Iraq, Iran, Turkey, and Syria, and regional government­s fear the spread of separatism from northern Iraq to their own Kurdish population­s.

In a speech in Ankara on Tuesday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned that Turkey will block Kurdish trucks from crossing the border, and he said all options, including economic and military, were on the table.

Turkey, in particular, has seen the vote as a threat to its national security and fears it will inflame separatism among its own Kurdish population.

“Until the very last moment, we weren’t expecting Barzani to make such a mistake as holding the referendum, apparently we were wrong,” Erdogan said, referring to Kurdistan region President Masud Barzani.

“This referendum decision, which has been taken without any consultati­on, is treachery,” Erdogan said, threatenin­g again to cut off the pipeline that carries oil from northern Iraq to the outside world. Erdogan’s remarks came after the Iraqi government also ruled out talks on possible secession for Kurdish-held parts of northern Iraq.

“We are not ready to discuss or have a dialogue about the results of the referendum because it is unconstitu­tional,” Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi said in a speech.

Abadi also gave the Kurdish authoritie­s until September 29 to hand over control of its airports or face an internatio­nal air embargo.

Just hours after polls closed on Monday, the Iraqi Defense Ministry announced the launch of ‘large-scale’ joint military exercises with Turkey.

In Tehran, the Iranian parliament announced hold a closed-door meeting on the referendum.

The referendum took place in the three provinces that officially make up the Kurdish autonomous region — Dahuk,

it would Irbil, and Sulaymaniy­ah — and some neighbouri­ng areas.

These areas include disputed cities such as oil-rich Kirkuk, Makhmour, Khanaqin, and Sinjar, over which Kurdish Peshmerga fighters have establishe­d control while fighting against Islamic State (IS) militants who captured large parts of northern Iraq and neighborin­g Syria in 2014.

The UN — as well as the United States and other western powers — expressed concern that the referendum would pull attention away from the efforts to defeat IS.

U.S. State Department spokeswoma­n criticised the referendum.

“The United States’ historic relationsh­ip with the people of the Iraqi Kurdistan region will not change in light of today’s nonbinding referendum, but we believe this step will increase instabilit­y and hardships for the Kurdistan region and its people,” she said.

In New York, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres also said he was concerned about the ‘potentiall­y destabilis­ing effects’ of the referendum.

While saying he supported “the sovereignt­y, territoria­l integrity, and unity of Iraq,” Guterres called for “structured dialogue and constructi­ve compromise” between Baghdad and Kurdish leaders to resolve their difference­s.

Heather

Nauert

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