Las Vegas Review-Journal

Turkey: Iraq retaking of Kirkuk rights wrong

Says Kurds shouldn’t have held referendum

- By Suzan Fraser The Associated Press

ANKARA, Turkey — Turkey said Wednesday that Iraq’s retaking of the northern city of Kirkuk from Kurdish forces earlier this week has rectified the Kurds’ “mistake” in holding a non-binding referendum on independen­ce last month.

Turkey has close ties to the leadership of Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region, but had urged them not to hold the vote. Iraq’s central government and neighborin­g Iran were also deeply opposed to the referendum, in which more than 90 percent voted for independen­ce.

Iraqi Kurdish leaders “miscalcula­ted and didn’t listen to our recommenda­tions,” Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said during a news conference in Ankara with his Portuguese counterpar­t.

“They thought they would make further gains — they didn’t. They thought they would unite the Kurds. On the contrary it has unfortunat­ely divided Kurds in Iraq. There is huge chaos and confusion.”

The referendum has put Iraqi Kurdish President Masoud Barzani in a delicate position as he now faces questions over whether the vote was worth the consequenc­es — losing the oil-rich Kirkuk region and other territorie­s to federal authoritie­s.

Kurdish officials said Wednesday that elections for Barzani’s post and the Kurdish parliament have been postponed. The regional electoral commission, citing the developmen­ts in Kirkuk, said the Iraqi Kurdish parliament would pick a new date. It also said there were not enough candidates to proceed with the polls, which were originally slated for Nov. 1.

Turkey, which is fighting a Kurdish insurgency within its borders, strongly opposes Kurdish moves toward independen­ce in neighborin­g countries like Iraq that also have large Kurdish population­s.

This week, it closed its airspace to flights to and from the Iraqi Kurdish region and said it would take steps to ensure that the control of a border gate into the region would return to the authority of Iraq’s central government.

Addressing a group of local administra­tors in Ankara, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he holds the leadership of the Iraqi Kurdish region responsibl­e for the bloodshed that ensued in the wake of the referendum.

Scattered clashes broke out as federal forces pushed into Kirkuk on Monday, but most Kurdish forces pulled out without a fight. The multi-ethnic city is home to Kurds, Arabs, Christians and a Turkmen community with close historic and ethnic ties to Turkey.

“What right do you have to lay claim on Kirkuk?” Erdogan said. “What history do you have in Kirkuk? What business do you have in Kirkuk?”

He called on Iraq’s Kurdish population to “punish” the leaders of their autonomous region.

Presidenti­al spokesman Ibrahim Kalin said Turkey was engaged in “intense diplomacy” with Iraq’s central government to safeguard the rights of the Turkmen population in Kirkuk.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States