IRAQ LOOKS TO ISOLATE KURDS POST REFERENDUM
Iraq’s military prepared on Saturday to take control of the international borders of the northern Kurdish region.
The move is part of the central government’s stepped-up efforts to isolate the Kurds following their vote on independence earlier this week.
On Friday, Iraq instituted a flight ban that halted all international flights from servicing the territory’s airports. Iraqi troops now in Turkey and Iran are expected to start enforcing control over the border crossings in and out of the Kurdish region.
Abdul-Wahab Barzani, director of intelligence at the crossing point from the Kurdish region into Turkey, said Iraqi troops are in position on the Turkish side of the border. He said he heard they plan to set up a customs point some 15 metres away on the Turkish side.
The escalation feeds worries in the US, a close ally of both the Kurds and Baghdad, that the referendum vote could lead to violence, setting off an unpredictable chain of events.
The non-binding referendum, in which the Kurds voted overwhelmingly in favour of independence from Iraq, will not immediately result in an independent state.
But the vote has set off alarm bells in Baghdad, where the government has said it is determined to prevent a break-up of the country, and in Iran and Turkey, which fear the vote will fuel similar ambitions among their own significant Kurdish populations.
ERBIL: The latest political developments should not have a negative impact on the strong relationship between sons of the homeland, Arabs, Turkmen, Kurds and others GRAND AYATOLLAH ALI AL-SISTANI, Iraq’s highest Shia authority