The National - News

Iraq government in secret talks with Kurdish leaders, MP says

- MINA ALDROUBI

Baghdad has been holding secret talks with leaders from the Kurdish region to resolve the crisis triggered by September’s independen­ce referendum, a member of Iraq’s parliament has said.

Kamel Al Zaydi, member of the State of Law coalition, said prime minister Haider Al Abadi had “establishe­d a secret committee headed by instrument­al political figures to negotiate with the Kurds on the referendum crisis.

“The negotiatio­ns are advancing rapidly and an announceme­nt is going to be made,” Mr Al Zaydi told the London-based Arabic newspaper Asharq Al

Awsat. Relations between the central government and the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) deteriorat­ed after the latter went ahead with a referendum on independen­ce for the semi-autonomous region. The September 25 vote saw an overwhelmi­ng response in favour of secession, but was rejected by Baghdad as illegal.

Mr Al Zaydi was a member of a parliament­ary committee set up to try to convince Kurdish leaders not to go ahead with the independen­ce referendum.

His revelation about the secret talks comes amid internatio­nal calls for Baghdad and the regional government in Erbil, the capital of the semi-autonomous Kurdish region, to begin negotiatio­ns on resolving their difference­s under the Iraqi constituti­on. “If all sides work towards the same goal, while protecting the unity of the country and the constituti­onal system, Iraq could possibly overcome the major challenges it has faced,” German foreign minister Sigmar Gabriel said yesterday.

The KRG said on Tuesday that it would respect a ruling by Iraq’s federal court against its push for independen­ce.

“We believe that this decision must become a basis for starting an inclusive national dialogue between Erbil and Baghdad to resolve all disputes,” the Kurdish government said.

France immediatel­y welcomed the move, and its foreign minister called for talks to begin.

UN secretary general Antonio Guterres said the UN shared the Kurdish government’s view that “outstandin­g issues between Baghdad and Erbil should be resolved by peaceful means through political negotiatio­ns based on the constituti­on of the republic of Iraq”.

“I am encouraged by the fact that the government of Iraq and the Kurdistan regional government have publicly expressed openness to such negotiatio­ns on several occasions,” Mr Guterres said in a letter delivered to Kurdish prime minister Nechirvan Barzani on Wednesday.

“A further destabilis­ation of the current situation must be prevented, in the interests of promoting national reconcilia­tion, fostering greater stability in a volatile region and confrontin­g the threat that ISIL continues to pose.”

Meanwhile, US president Donald Trump’s special envoy to the anti-ISIL coalition, Brett McGurk, also touched on the Kurdish issue during a meeting with Mr Al Abadi on Wednesday. Kurdish politician­s have also called for talks to begin as soon as possible.

“We call on Iraq to not waste any more time and to start talks with the Kurdish regional government, and to avoid the language of threat,” said Jaafar Emnini, deputy speaker of the Kurdish parliament.

Begard Talabani, secretary of the regional parliament, warned that Kurds would “withdraw from the political process in Iraq” if Baghdad refused to start talks with the region.

 ?? AFP ?? Kurdish prime minister Nechirvan Barzani
AFP Kurdish prime minister Nechirvan Barzani

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