Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Kurds’ independen­ce push

- SUSANNAH GEORGE

An Iraqi Kurdish man prepares to cast his ballot Monday in Irbil, Iraq, in a nonbinding independen­ce referendum that has drawn opposition from countries including the U.S.

IRBIL, Iraq — Iraqi Kurds voted Monday in a landmark referendum on supporting independen­ce, a move billed by the Kurdish leadership as an exercise in self-determinat­ion but viewed as a hostile act by Iraq’s central government. Neighborin­g Turkey even threatened a military response.

To Baghdad, the vote threatens a redrawing of Iraq’s borders, taking a sizable part of the country’s oil wealth with it. For Turkey and Iran, leaders feared the move would embolden their own Kurdish population­s.

The vote — likely to be a resounding yes when official results are revealed later this week — is not binding and will not immediatel­y bring independen­ce to the autonomous region. Neverthele­ss, it has raised tensions and fears of instabilit­y in Iraq and beyond.

Hours after polls closed Monday night across the Kurdish region of northern Iraq, the Defense Ministry announced the launch of “largescale” joint military exercises with Turkey.

Earlier in the day, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan threatened the Iraqi Kurdish region with military interventi­on. Iran — which also opposed the vote — held military exercises along its border with Iraq on Sunday.

The Iraqi Kurdish push for independen­ce has been made even more combustibl­e because Kurdish forces captured extensive territory in fighting against the Islamic State militant group in the past year. Those areas run from northwest Iraq 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 some residents there are participat­ing in the referendum.

An escalation in rhetoric within Iraq set the stage for increased tensions as Iraqi Kurds lined up to vote.

The Kurdish region’s president, Masoud Barzani, and Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi both threatened to use force ahead of Monday’s referendum.

But Barzani later softened his tone. He said at a news conference Sunday that he believed the vote would be peaceful but acknowledg­ed the path to independen­ce would be “risky.”

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

Al-Abadi said on the eve of the referendum that the vote “threatens Iraq” and “is a danger to the region.”

“We will take measures to safeguard the nation’s unity and protect all Iraqis,” he warned in a televised address from Baghdad.

The United States came out as an early opponent to the vote, initially urging it to be called off and then announcing a deal had been presented to Baghdad and Iraq’s Kurdish leadership. But the Kurdish region pressed on with the vote despite the concerns.

U.S. officials warned that the vote is likely to destabiliz­e the region and take resources and attention from the fight against Islamic State militants.

The promise of an independen­t state has long been at the center of Iraqi Kurdish politics. When colonial powers drew the map of the Middle East after World War I, the Kurds were divided among Turkey, Iran, Syria and Iraq.

The dream of independen­ce was evident among some of the voters in Kirkuk.

“I feel so great and happy. I feel we’ll be free,” Kurdish resident Suad Pirot said after voting. “Nobody will rule us. We will be independen­t.”

The city has large Kurdish, Arab, Turkmen and Christian communitie­s, and it had some small clashes in the days leading up to the vote. A curfew was imposed Monday evening out of fear of more violence.

Baghdad residents strongly criticized the referendum, saying it would raise sectarian tensions and create an “Israel in Iraq.”

“This is a division of Iraq,” said journalist Raad Mohammad. Another Baghdad resident, Ali al-Rubayah, described the vote as a “black day in the history of the Kurds.”

Lawyer Tariq al-Zubaydi said the referendum was inappropri­ate amid the “ongoing threat of terrorism and Islamic State” militants.

“The country is going through a difficult period. This requires a coming together of our efforts,” he said. “A unified country is better for all.”

Speaking in Istanbul, Erdogan said Turkey doesn’t recognize the referendum and declared its results would be “null and void.”

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Qassim Abdul-Zahra, Balint Szlanko, Ali Abdul-Hassan, Bram Janssen and Suzan Fraser of The Associated Press.

 ?? AP/KHALID MOHAMMED ??
AP/KHALID MOHAMMED

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