The National - News

WE IRAQIS JUST WANT TO LIVE IN A COUNTRY THAT IS UNITED

Ahead of the Kurdish independen­ce referendum on Monday – with all that the vote could mean for this turbulent region – the novelist Hayat Hasan explains why she fears the implicatio­ns of a vote for separation

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The outcome of Monday’s vote is not in question. The Kurds of Iraq have sought independen­ce for decades. It’s also no surprise that Iraqis – those living in Baghdad and those in the Kurdistan region – see things differentl­y.

Despite all the distressin­g violence that threatens the country’s security and economic outlook, we Iraqis have always envisaged a united country with its territoria­l integrity respected, regardless of whatever troubles the country is going through.

Iraqis want to live in a united country, they don’t want Iraq to split up.

If a part of it is lost then our identity is lost also. Separation will mean there is a lack of co-operation among us and that breeds feelings of disappoint­ment and that leads to feelings of mistrust and insecurity.

I am in my 70s and from my point of view, the Kurds have always been equals in Iraqi society and always treated as such. My heart aches to hear that they will separate from us because throughout my life I have never understood why they need to separate. I have never witnessed discrimina­tion against Kurds in society, especially in Baghdad. They spoke their own language – in schools too – and they held positions in the public and private sectors.

We were friends and there was always inter-marriage between Kurds and non-Kurds. There are so many families with mixed heritage. How do you separate those?

Saddam Hussein oppressed everyone in Iraq, anyone who stood in his way or was perceived as a threat to his regime, regardless of ethnicity. We all suffered the same under him.

I do not say the Kurds have no right to independen­ce. It is also their right to hold a referendum, but I do question whether the time is right. I’m opposed to the referendum because it will unleash chaos and insecurity in the region.

Most Iraqis think the dispute between Baghdad and Erbil is over oil and money only. Mr Barzani might think that a yes vote gives him leverage to negotiate with Baghdad and neighbouri­ng powers from a greater position of strength.

After the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003, Iraq’s Kurdistan experience­d overwhelmi­ng economic growth.

In January 2014, the government of former prime minister Nouri Al Maliki cut off financial transfers to the Kurds as part of a fight over control of oil resources.

Under the Iraqi constituti­on, Kurdistan is entitled to 17 per cent of Iraqi’s overall budget, but that was cut in 2014 when the war began against ISIL.

Baghdad claims the Kurdish military gained control of oil wells in the city of Kirkuk – a contested city – and began exporting that oil throughout the region without permission from Baghdad, reaping the benefits of the trade for themselves. This resulted in oil prices going down.

That, and the constant disputes with central government in Baghdad and a costly war against ISIL extremists, sent the region’s economy into a slump. To a certain extent the Kurds cannot survive without Baghdad’s central government. Their economy is in such crisis that they don’t even have enough money to pay their civil servants.

Also, it must be said that not all Kurds are on board with the referendum.

I have Kurdish friends living in Erbil and Sulemanyia who are anxious, as they don’t know what the future will hold for them. They tell me constantly that they are against separation but they are so angry about how central government has mismanaged the economy that they are expressing their dissatisfa­ction through the referendum.

At the same time, they’re worried their wages won’t be paid afterwards. Others are worried that they’ll be expelled. Some of my friends are originally Kurds who were born in Baghdad but left after 2003 because of security reasons.

Now they’re in a dilemma because the status of Kurds who were not born in Kurdish territory is uncertain. So they ask, ‘Will we be kicked out of Erbil if Kurdistan separates?’

It’s a heartbreak­ing situation. It should never have come to this. Iraq is for everyone.

It’s a heartbreak­ing situation. It should never have come to this. Iraq is for everyone

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 ?? Reuters; AFP ?? Iraqi Kurdish president Masoud Barzani at a rally, top. Kurdish peshmerga show their support for Monday’s referendum
Reuters; AFP Iraqi Kurdish president Masoud Barzani at a rally, top. Kurdish peshmerga show their support for Monday’s referendum

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