Kuwait Times

Kurds vote ‘yes’ in independen­t referendum

92.73 percent of voters backing statehood

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IRBIL: Iraq’s Kurds announced a massive “yes” vote for independen­ce yesterday following a referendum that has incensed Baghdad and sparked internatio­nal concern. Official results showed 92.73 percent of voters backing statehood in Monday’s non-binding referendum, which Iraq’s central government rejected as illegal. Turnout was put at 72.61 percent. Longtime Iraqi Kurd leader Massud Barzani said the vote would not lead to an immediate declaratio­n of independen­ce and should instead open the door to negotiatio­ns.

But Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi told lawmakers yesterday there was no question of using its results as the basis for talks. “The referendum must be annulled and dialogue initiated in the framework of the constituti­on. We will never hold talks based on the results of the referendum,” Abadi said. “We will impose Iraqi law in the entire region of Kurdistan under the constituti­on,” he said.

Pressure has been mounting on the Kurds since the vote, not just from Baghdad but also from Ankara, with Turkey threatenin­g a range of measures including cutting off key export routes for the region. An overwhelmi­ng “yes” vote had been widely expected. Pursuing a long-cherished dream of statehood, the Kurds went ahead with the referendum in defiance of widespread objections, including from the United Nations and United States.

It has raised fears of unrest and the possibilit­y of a military confrontat­ion involving the Kurds, who are key allies in internatio­nally backed offensives against the jihadists of the Islamic State group. In a televised address late on Tuesday, Barzani had urged Abadi “not to close the door to dialogue because it is dialogue that will solve problems”.

“We assure the internatio­nal community of our willingnes­s to engage in dialogue with Baghdad,” he said, insisting the referendum was not meant “to delimit the border (between Kurdistan and Iraq), nor to impose it de facto.”

Airlines cancel flights

Baghdad has steadily pushed back against the vote. Lawmakers yesterday passed a resolution calling on Abadi to “take all necessary measures to maintain Iraq’s unity” including by deploying security forces to disputed areas.

The resolution also called for the closure of border posts with Turkey and Iran that are outside central government control. Abadi said Tuesday he would ban all internatio­nal flights to and from Kurdistan in three days unless airports in its main cities Arbil and Sulaimaniy­ah were placed under his government’s control. Lebanon’s Middle East Airlines and EgyptAir both said yesterday they would halt flights to Arbil this week at the request of Baghdad. Turkey fears the vote will stoke the separatist ambitions of its own sizeable Kurdish minority and on Tuesday President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned that Iraq’s Kurds risked sparking an “ethnic war”. “If Barzani and the Kurdistan Regional Government do not go back on this mistake as soon as possible, they will go down in history with the shame of having dragged the region into an ethnic and sectarian war,” he said. Erdogan had earlier warned that Turkey would shut its border with Iraqi Kurdistan and threatened to block oil exports from the region through Turkey. Erdogan even suggested the possibilit­y of a cross-border incursion similar to the one Turkey carried out against IS and Kurdish fighters in Syria. Monday’s vote took place across the three northern provinces of autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan-Arbil, Sulaimaniy­ah and Dohuk-and in disputed border zones such as the oil-rich province of Kirkuk.

Opponents have accused Barzani of seeking to empower himself through the vote, and said he should have accepted a UN-backed plan to postpone the referendum in favor of negotiatio­ns with Baghdad. Iran, which also has a large Kurdish minority, condemned the vote as well and on Sunday stopped all flights from its territory to and from Iraqi Kurdistan. Analysts say that despite their threats, Baghdad, Ankara and Tehran are proceeding cautiously in reacting to the vote, wary of sparking a serious confrontat­ion with the Kurds that would further destabiliz­e an already volatile region.

Closing their borders with Iraqi Kurdistan would also hurt Turkey, which exports more than $8 billion worth of goods every year to the region, and Iran, which exports about $6 billion. Left without a state of their own when the borders of the Middle East were redrawn after World War I, the Kurds see themselves as the world’s largest stateless people. The non-Arab ethnic group of between 25 and 35 million is spread across Iraq, Iran, Turkey and Syria.

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 ?? — AFP ?? IRBIL: A Kurdish flag hangs in the Irbil Internatio­nal Airport, in Iraq.
— AFP IRBIL: A Kurdish flag hangs in the Irbil Internatio­nal Airport, in Iraq.

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