The Timaru Herald

Police enter Kirkuk as ethnic tensions rise

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IRAQ: Police deployed yesterday in the northern Iraqi oil city of Kirkuk to prevent a deadly dispute from developing into ethnic clashes ahead of a referendum on Kurdish independen­ce, local residents said.

The Kurdish authoritie­s want to hold the vote on September 25, despite opposition from the central government in Baghdad and the region’s non-Kurdish population.

The city is also home to Arabs and Turkmen.

Kurdish security and the city police erected checkpoint­s across the city after a Kurd was killed in a clash with the guards of a Turkmen political party office in the city.

Two other Kurds and one Turkmen security guard were also wounded in the clash that broke out when a Kurdish convoy celebratin­g the referendum, carrying Kurdish flags, drove by the Turkmen party office, security sources said. The Kurdish dead and wounded were among those celebratin­g, they said.

Tension in the city rose after its Kurdish-led provincial council voted this month to include it in a referendum planned by the Kurdistan Regional Government of northern Iraq.

Kirkuk lies outside the official boundaries of the Kurdistan region. It is claimed by both the Kurds and the cen- tral government in Baghdad.

Kurdish peshmerga fighters seized Kirkuk and other disputed territorie­s when the Iraqi army collapsed in the face of Islamic State in 2014, preventing its oilfields from falling into the militants’ hands.

Iranian-backed Iraqi Shi’ite militias have threatened to dislodged the peshmerga from Kirkuk should the Kurds persist in holding the vote.

The Kurdish authoritie­s are showing no sign of bowing despite intense internatio­nal pressure and regional threats to call off the vote which Baghdad says is ‘’unconstitu­tional’' and a prelude to breaking up the country. – Reuters

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