The Jerusalem Post

Iraq’s Kurds say ‘no turning back’ on referendum

- • By MAHER CHMAYTELLI

ERBIL (Reuters) – Iraq’s Kurds said on Friday a referendum on independen­ce will go ahead despite warnings internatio­nally that a vote in favor of secession could trigger conflict with Baghdad at a time when the fight against Islamic State is not yet won.

The Kurds have played a major role in the eight-monthold US-backed campaign to defeat the hard-line Sunni insurgents in Nineveh province around their de facto capital Mosul.

Baghdad’s Shi’ite-led government has rejected any move by the mostly Sunni Kurds to press unilateral­ly for independen­ce, insisting that any decision about the future of the country should involve all of its parts.

But Hoshiyar Zebari, a former Iraqi foreign and finance minister and now a senior adviser to Kurdistan Regional Government President Massoud Barzani, said the decision to hold the vote on September 25 was irreversib­le.

“We crossed the Rubicon with that decision, there is no going back,” he told Reuters in a telephone interview.

However, the expected “yes” vote would simply strengthen the Kurds’ hand in talks with Baghdad rather than leading automatica­lly to a break from Iraq, and an independen­t Kurdistan would not annex the oil-rich region of Kirkuk and three other disputed regions in Kurdish-controlled territory, he said.

“You will hear people saying we are for Iraq’s unity, territoria­l integrity, we want dialogue between Baghdad and Erbil, we understand all this,” he said.

“A referendum is a democratic process; no democratic country can oppose having a referendum. We are not talking about independen­ce, we are talking about the referendum,” he said.

The Kurdistan Regional Government’s announceme­nt on Wednesday sparked concern in the United States and Germany, two of the region’s most important partners in the fight against Islamic State, which still controls a small part of Iraq’s northern city of Mosul as well as swaths of territory in Iraq and Syria.

Neighborin­g Iran, Turkey and Syria all oppose secession, fearing separatism will spread to their own Kurdish population­s.

Turkey’s Foreign Ministry called the plan a “terrible mistake” on Friday and said that Iraq’s territoria­l integrity and political unity was a fundamenta­l principle for Ankara.

Iraq has been led by Shi’ites since the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, a Sunni, by the US-led invasion of 2003. The country’s majority Shi’ite community mainly lives in the south while the Kurds and Sunni Arabs inhabit two corners of the north. The center around Baghdad is mixed.

The Kurds have their own armed force, the Peshmerga, which in 2014 prevented Islamic State from capturing Kirkuk after the Iraqi army fled in the face of the terrorists.

They are effectivel­y running the region, also claimed by Turkmen and Arabs. Hard-line Iran-backed Iraqi Shi’ite militias have threatened to expel the Kurds by force from this region and three other disputed areas – Sinjar, Makhmour and Khanaqin.

The Sinjar region is populated by Yazidis, the followers of an ancient religion who speak a Kurdish language and the group most persecuted by Islamic State. Makhmour is south of the Kurdish capital Erbil and Khanaqin is near the border with Iran.

Zebari said the vote will only be held in these disputed territorie­s if local elected councils want to join the process.

 ?? (Alkis Konstantin­idis/Reuters) ?? PEOPLE WALK THROUGH the market in the Citadel of Erbil on Thursday.
(Alkis Konstantin­idis/Reuters) PEOPLE WALK THROUGH the market in the Citadel of Erbil on Thursday.

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