Arab Times

Kurds plan 2 polls

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Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region is calling presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections for Nov 1, the Erbil-based Rudaw TV said on Tuesday, as the Kurdish leadership cements its case for independen­ce.

A referendum held on Sept 25 in the country’s Kurdish-held northern regions delivered an overwhelmi­ng ‘yes’ for independen­ce, raising fears in Iraq and abroad of ethnic strains and a weakening of a USbacked campaign against Islamic State.

The elections would be calculated to reinforce the legitimacy of the leadership ahead of a drive for outright independen­ce and any negotiatio­ns that might involve.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said on Tuesday Turkey would impose further sanctions on northern Iraq over the vote. Powerful neighbours Ankara and Tehran fear it could fuel Kurdish separatism within their own borders.

The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) has not declared independen­ce. The November polls are explicitly for parliament and presidency of the region, not for an independen­t state.

Baghdad retaliated to the referendum with an internatio­nal flights ban on Kurdish airports, while Iran and Turkey launched joint military drills with Iraqi troops at their borders with Iraqi Kurdistan.

The Shi’ite Arab-led Iraqi government has rejected a KRG offer to discuss independen­ce. It demanded Kurdish leaders cancel the result of the referendum or face continued sanctions, internatio­nal isolation and possible military interventi­on.

On Tuesday, the federal parliament in Baghdad raised the threat of excluding those among Kurdish members who voted in the referendum, on the basis that the vote

was unconstitu­tional.

The parliament decided to collect the names of those who voted in the referendum as a step towards their impeachmen­t by the Higher Federal Court, Speaker Salim al-Jabouri told a news conference after the session, boycotted by most Kurdish MPs. Jabouri said he was willing to open a dialogue with the KRG to resolve disputes but ruled out talks on independen­ce.

Masoud Barzani, the heir of a dynasty which has led a Kurdish struggle for independen­ce for over a century, has held the KRG presidency since its establishm­ent in 2005, two years after the US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.

His tenure was extended beyond his second term, in 2013, as fresh turmoil engulfed the region and Islamic State overran, in 2014, about a third of Iraq, threatenin­g the Kurdish region. It was unclear whether Barzani would or could stand in the November poll as Kurdish law says a president cannot stay in office for more than two terms.

Campaignin­g for the two elections will start on Oct 15, Rudaw TV cited the High Elections and Referendum Commission chief Hendrean Mohammed.

Islamic State’s self-declared “caliphate’’ effectivel­y collapsed in July, when their stronghold in Mosul, west of the KRG capital Erbil, fell to a US-backed Iraqi offensive with the participat­ion of Kurdish Peshmerga fighters.

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