Arab News

Barzani should tell the truth:This is about secession

- AMIR TAHERI

Self-determinat­ion was not the issue in the Kurdish referendum, and any attempt by the Kurds’ leader at a unilateral Declaratio­n of Independen­ce will not end well.

THE Iraqi Kurdistan referendum is a fait accompli. It must be taken into account in shaping future developmen­ts, and Masoud Barzani, the man who orchestrat­ed it, must be as pleased as Punch.

In contemplat­ing the future, it is important to know exactly what we are talking about. Supporters of the referendum have pinned their flag to two concepts: Independen­ce and self-determinat­ion.

They say Iraqi Kurds want independen­ce. However, like all other Iraqis, they already live in a country that is recognized as independen­t and is a full member of the UN.

The concept of the quest for independen­ce applies to lands that are part of a foreign empire or the “possession” of a colonial power. Legally speaking, at least since 1932, that has not been the case in Iraq.

Self-determinat­ion is recognized as a right under internatio­nal law. It was first developed after the First World War and the break-up of the Ottoman and AustroHung­arian Empires. The idea was that people in the component parts of those empires should determine their own future, especially by deciding whether or not to form states of their own.

After the Second World War, the concept was used to provide a legal framework for decoloniza­tion as British, French and Dutch empires broke up. In the past 100 years, thanks to the concept of self-determinat­ion, over 120 new independen­t countries have appeared on the map.

Self-determinat­ion was establishe­d as the right of all peoples to choose their own government­s and pass their own laws rather than be subject to distant foreign rulers and lawmakers. So Iraqi Kurds already enjoy self-determinat­ion because they choose their own local and national government­s and lawmakers.

The suggestion that the Kurdish referendum was about independen­ce and selfdeterm­ination is bogus, to say the least. Trying to hoodwink public opinion can lead to dangerous complicati­ons in the future.

So what was the referendum really about? It was about secession, which is not the same thing as self-determinat­ion or independen­ce. Its organizers want to detach the areas where Kurds form a majority and set up a new state.

However, while self-determinat­ion is universall­y recognized as a right, secession is not. It is an option, not a right. At best, it may be regarded as a desire, at worst, a folly.

Also, it has little to do with the degree of democratic developmen­t of societies. The UK is a well-establishe­d democracy but still faces secessioni­sm from many Scots. There are secessioni­sts in several other democracie­s; Quebecois in Canada, Corsicans in France, Basques and Catalans in Spain, Frisians in Denmark, Kashmiris in India and even Porto Allergens in Brazil.

The important thing is that, in all those cases, parties that support secession say so openly, seldom trying to disguise their ambition as a quest for self-determinat­ion and independen­ce. So the first thing Barzani should do is to call a spade a spade, and openly admit that what he is seeking is secession. He should say that his aim is to break up Iraq, a multi-ethnic republic, to create a mono-ethnic Kurdish state.

Interestin­gly, the word Iraq, which means “lowland,” is a geographic term with no ethnic connotatio­ns. Iraqi citizenshi­p is a civic concept, transcendi­ng ethnic, religious and racial identities. Many countries in the world are named after their majority ethnic component. Turkey is the land of the Turks and Armenia the land of Armenians. All the “stan” countries refer to ethnic majorities there. Beyond the Middle East, all but 12 of the European states are also named after ethnic components: Germany is the land of Germans and Russia the land of Russians.

However, none of the Middle Eastern countries that emerged from the break-up of the Ottoman Empire are labeled with ethnic identities. They have historic or geographic names and regard the presence of various ethnic or religious communitie­s within their borders as a given. Even Israel, though a special case for obvious reasons, fits into that pattern if only because 27 percent of its citizens are not Jews. They are Israelis but not Israelites.

The Middle East has been the sphere of multi-ethnic empires for about 25 centuries: Assyrian, Babylonian, Persian, Roman, Byzantines, Umayyad, Abbasid, Ottomans etc. The Kurdish state that Barzani wishes to create would be the first in 2,000 years in the Middle East to claim a purely ethnic identity.

The internatio­nal community recognizes the outcome of secession only if it is achieved with the consent of the country concerned. Montenegro seceded from Serbia through negotiatio­ns and was admitted into the UN. Kosovo also seceded but without consent and is still in limbo, rejected by the UN and recognized by only a handful of nations.

A referendum does not automatica­lly bestow legitimacy on secession. Russia held them in Crimea, which it annexed from Ukraine, and in South Ossetia and Abkhazia, which it took from Georgia. No other country recognizes those secessions.

The reason is that there is no legal mechanism to recognize non-consensual secession. The Internatio­nal Court of Justice at The Hague made that clear by refusing to certify Kosovo’s independen­ce. In Canada, the High Court has ruled against Quebec secession and in France Corsican secessioni­st demands have been thrown out by courts. In Iraq, the constituti­on, drafted with the full and enthusiast­ic participat­ion of Barzani, excludes unilateral secession.

Finally, secession does not feature in the programs of any of the dozen or so parties active among Kurds in Iraq, Turkey, Syria, Iran, Armenia and Azerbaijan. So the next step Barzani must take is to enshrine secession in his party’s charter and manifesto for the next Iraqi general election in 2018. If he does that and obtains a mandate to seek secession, he could then demand that the central government in Baghdad enter into negotiatio­ns on the issue.

In other words, any attempt at a unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce could lead only to impasse, a deadly impasse.

Amir Taheri was executive editor in chief of the daily Kayhan in Iran from 1972 to 1979. He has worked at, or written for, innumerabl­e publicatio­ns and published 11 books. — Originally published in Asharq Al-Awsat.

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