Austin American-Statesman

Iraqi Kurds vote on independen­ce

Referendum would mark a stance by the Kurds to break away.

- By Susannah George and Balint Szlanko

Iraqi Kurds cast ballots on Monday in their autonomous region and in a wide sweep of captured territorie­s on whether to seek independen­ce from Baghdad, a historic vote that has also raised tensions and fears of instabilit­y.

The referendum is non-binding and will not immediatel­y bring independen­ce, but it would mark a definitive stance by the Kurds to break away, and Kurdish leaders say they will use a “yes” vote to press for negotiatio­ns with Iraq’s central government to win statehood.

From Istanbul, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan threatened military interventi­on in Iraq in response to the vote, stressing that Kurdish independen­ce was unacceptab­le to his country and that this was a “matter of survival.”

The Iraqi Kurdish push for independen­ce has been made even more combustibl­e because Kurdish forces captured extensive territorie­s in fighting with the Islamic State group in the past year. Those territorie­s run from northwest Iraq across the country to the Iranian border on the east — including the oil-rich city of Kirkuk. Baghdad claims those territorie­s, but the Kurds say they are part of their zone and residents there are participat­ing in Monday’s vote.

More than 3 million people are expected to vote across the three provinces that officially make up the Iraqi Kurdish autonomous region and in the disputed territorie­s, according to the Independen­t High Elections and Referendum Commission, the body overseeing the vote.

Lines began forming early in the day at polling stations across Irbil, the Kurdish regional capital. Tahsin Karim was one of the first people to vote in his Irbil neighborho­od.

“Today we came here to vote in the referendum for the independen­ce of Kurdistan,” he said. “We hope that we can achieve independen­ce.”

The Kurdish region’s president, Masoud Barzani, also voted at a polling station packed with journalist­s and cameras. On the eve of the referendum, Barzani said he believed the vote would be peaceful, though he acknowledg­ed that the path to independen­ce would be “risky.”

“We are ready to pay any price for our independen­ce,” he said.

The referendum is being carried out despite mounting opposition from Baghdad and the internatio­nal community.

The United States, a key ally of Iraq’s Kurds, has warned the vote will likely destabiliz­e the region amid the fight against IS. The Iraqi central government has also come out strongly against the referendum, demanding on Sunday that all airports and borders crossings in the Kurdish region be handed back to federal government control.

In a televised address from Baghdad on Sunday night, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said that “the referendum is unconstitu­tional. It threatens Iraq, peaceful coexistenc­e among Iraqis and is a danger to the region.”

“We will take measures to safeguard the nation’s unity and protect all Iraqis,” he added.

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