The Jerusalem Post

Baghdad piles pressure on Iraqi Kurds to reverse independen­ce vote

Parliament says troops should retake Kirkuk oil fields • Kurds refuse to hand over control of internatio­nal airports

- • By AHMED RASHEED and RAYA JALABI

BAGHDAD/ERBIL (Reuters) – Baghdad piled pressure on Iraq’s Kurds on Wednesday, demanding they cancel their vote for independen­ce while parliament urged the central government to send troops to take control of vital oil fields held by Kurdish forces.

Stepping up efforts to isolate autonomous Kurdish-held northern Iraq, which backed secession in a referendum on Monday that angered neighborin­g countries, Baghdad demanded that foreign government­s close their diplomatic missions in the Kurdish capital, Erbil.

The referendum has fueled fears of a new regional conflict. A delegation from Iraq’s armed forces headed to neighborin­g Iran to coordinate military efforts, apparently as part of retaliator­y measures taken by the government in Baghdad following the vote.

Iran and Turkey also oppose any move toward Kurdish secession and their armies have started joint exercises near their borders with Iraqi Kurdistan in recent days. Iraq and Turkey have also held joint military drills.

Foreign airlines began suspending flights to Kurdish airports after the Iraqi Civil Aviation Authority said internatio­nal flights to Erbil and Sulaimaniy­a would be suspended at 15:00 GMT on Tuesday.

Kurdish authoritie­s rejected Baghdad’s demands that they should annul the referendum as a condition for dialogue and hand over control of their internatio­nal airports.

Turkey, which has threatened to impose sanctions on the Kurds, said its border with northern Iraq remained open, although it may not remain so. The number of trucks passing through had however decreased.

Home to the region’s largest Kurdish population, Turkey has been battling a three-decade insurgency in its largely Kurdish southeast and fears the referendum will inflame separatist tension at home.

The Kurds, who run an autonomous region within Iraq, consider Monday’s referendum to be an historic step in a generation­s-old quest for a state of their own.

Iraq considers the vote unconstitu­tional, especially as it was held not only within the Kurdish region itself but also on disputed territory held by Kurds elsewhere in northern Iraq.

The United States, major European countries and neighbors Turkey and Iran strongly opposed the referendum, which they described as destabiliz­ing at a time when all sides are still fighting against Islamic State.

Iraqi Kurdish leader Masoud Barzani announced on Tuesday evening that the “yes” vote had won. Full results were expected later on Wednesday.

The outcome has caused anger in Baghdad, where parliament, in a session boycotted by Kurdish lawmakers, asked Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi to send troops to the Kurdish-held region of Kirkuk to take control of its oilfields.

Kurdish Peshmerga forces took Kirkuk, a multi-ethnic region, in 2014 when the Iraqi Army fled in the face of Islamic State terrorists who overran about a third of Iraq. The Kurds prevented Kirkuk’s huge oil resources from falling into the Sunni Islamists’ hands.

“The government has to bring back the oil fields of Kirkuk under the control of the oil ministry,” the resolution backed by parliament in Baghdad said.

The area, long claimed by the Kurds, is also home to Turkmen and Arab communitie­s, who opposed the independen­ce vote, although the Kurdistan Regional Government included the area in the referendum.

Barzani, who is KRG president, has said the vote is not binding, but meant to provide a mandate for negotiatio­ns with Baghdad and neighborin­g countries over the peaceful secession of the region from Iraq. Baghdad has rejected talks. Abadi, a moderate from Iraq’s Shi’ite Arab majority, is under pressure to take punitive measures against the Kurds. Hard-line Iranian-backed Shi’ite groups have already threatened to march on Kirkuk.

The Kurds were left without a state of their own when the Ottoman Empire crumbled a century ago. Around 30 million are scattered in northern Iraq, southeaste­rn Turkey and parts of Syria and Iran.

The autonomous region they control in Iraq is the closest the Kurds have come in modern times to a state. It has flourished, largely remaining at peace while the rest of Iraq has been in a continuous state of civil war for 14 years.

Since the fall of Saddam Hussein, they have had to carefully balance their ambitions for full independen­ce with the threat of a backlash from their neighbors and the reluctance of Washington to redraw borders.

In the past four years they achieved a measure of economic independen­ce by opening a route to sell oil through pipelines to a port in Turkey. But that still leaves them at the mercy of Ankara, which draws a firm line at formal independen­ce.

The Kurds say the referendum acknowledg­es their contributi­on in confrontin­g Islamic State after it overwhelme­d the Iraqi Army in 2014.

Iraq’s Kurds have been close allies of the United States since Washington offered them protection from Saddam in 1991. But the United States has long encouraged the Kurds to avoid unilateral steps so as not to jeopardize the stability of Iraq or antagonize Turkey.

The US State Department said it was “deeply disappoint­ed” by the decision to conduct the referendum, while the European Union regretted that the Kurds had failed to heed its call not to hold the vote.

 ?? (Azad Lashkari/Reuters) ?? PASSENGERS LINE UP at the check-in counters at Erbil Internatio­nal Airport in Iraq yesterday.
(Azad Lashkari/Reuters) PASSENGERS LINE UP at the check-in counters at Erbil Internatio­nal Airport in Iraq yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel