Times of Oman

Defiant Kurds shrug off risk of trade war after independen­ce vote

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ZAKHO

(Iraq): More than three weeks after Iraq’s Kurds voted for independen­ce, it’s business as usual at the bustling Ibrahim Khalil border crossing with Turkey.

Ankara has threatened to impose economic sanctions on Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region to deter moves towards independen­ce, but hundreds of trucks still cross the border each day -- some with supplies for Kurdish areas, others en route to Baghdad.

Closure of the border would sever a lifeline for the region in northern Iraq and step up efforts by Turkey, Iran and the Iraqi government to isolate it.

But the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) is gambling that its three main trade partners will be reluctant to impose a blockade that would put billions of dollars in trade at risk and could hurt all sides involved.

“We send about 100 packed trucks a day to Baghdad,” said Hani Anas, a trader standing by rows of steel rods stacked near the border. “Iraq will suffer as well.”

It is a risky gamble for a region that is heavily dependent on food imports and oil exports, via a pipeline that passes through Turkey. The underminin­g of its economy could deal a heavy blow to its chances of survival as an independen­t state if it pushes ahead with breakaway moves.

The outcome of the standoff could also have repercussi­ons far beyond the immediate region as Iraqi Kurdistan produces about 650,000 barrels of crude oil per day -- 15 per cent of Iraqi output and around 0.7 per cent of global oil production.

The KRG has not taken any formal steps to break away from Iraq since the Kurds overwhelmi­ngly backed independen­ce in a referendum on September 25, but has scheduled regional presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections for November 1.

“If Baghdad tries to hurt us it will hurt itself,” said Soran Aziz, vice president of the chamber of commerce and industry in the Kurdish administra­tive capital Erbil.

“If borders are closed with neighbouri­ng countries it will have a limited impact on us,” he added. “If an economic blockade impacts us by 1 per cent, it will impact them by 10 per cent.” Baghdad opposes Kurdish independen­ce because it wants to hold Iraq together. Iran and Turkey fear secession would encourage their own Kurdish population­s to press for a homeland, and Washington worries that the tensions will damage unity in the fight against IS.

Iraqi Kurdistan is certainly vulnerable over its economy. Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/world

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