Muscat Daily

Iran warns of political chaos after Kurdistan referendum

Revolution­ary Guards say they are sending missile equipment to western border

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There was a large turnout for Monday’s vote in northern Iraq’s Kurdistan, which is expected to deliver a resounding ‘yes’ to independen­ce

Tehran, Iran - Iran said on Tuesday that the independen­ce vote in Iraqi Kurdistan would trigger ‘political chaos’ in the region, while the Revolution­ary Guards said they were sending new missile equipment to the border.

“The outcome of this move is political chaos in the region,” said Ali Akbar Velayati, chief foreign policy advisor to Iran’s supreme leader.

“The honourable people of Kurdistan will not bear this disgrace,” he said, according to the semi-official ISNA news agency.

There was a large turnout for Monday’s vote in northern Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region, which is expected to deliver a resounding ‘yes’ to independen­ce.

As with Turkey, Iran strongly opposes independen­ce for the Iraqi Kurds, fearing it will provoke separatist­s among its own Kurdish population.

State television made a rare admission on Tuesday that Kurds in Iran’s northweste­rn bor-

der region had held peaceful demonstrat­ions in support of the referendum.

“People in the cities of Sanandaj, Baneh and Saghez of Kurdistan province held peaceful

gatherings congratula­ting their Iraqi fellow Kurdish-speaking people,” broadcaste­r IRIB reported.

Iran is also worried about ties between the Kurds and Israel, the

only government in the region that has supported Kurdish efforts towards statehood.

“Unfortunat­ely, (Iraqi Kurd leader Massud) Barzani has been connected to the Zionists since long ago and hasn’t learned a lesson from Palestine,” said Velayati.

Iran has also blamed its traditiona­l enemies - the Americans and British - despite their firm opposition to the referendum.

Meanwhile, the deputy head of the Revolution­ary Guards aerial headquarte­rs, Alireza Elahi, said it had ‘ sent new missile equipment to the western region to boost the aerial defence and preparedne­ss against any violation’.

At least one Iranian lawmaker called for a more conciliato­ry stance now that the vote has gone ahead. “The referendum does not mean independen­ce for Iraqi Kurdistan. There is a process which, if implemente­d, will take two to three years. So we should not be so sensitive and should only make clear to Kurdish people that this is not in their interest,” MP Ali Motahari told reporters, according to ISNA.

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 ?? (AFP) ?? Kurdish officials break the seals off a ballot box after the referendum vote, at a polling station in Arbil, the capital of the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq, on Monday
(AFP) Kurdish officials break the seals off a ballot box after the referendum vote, at a polling station in Arbil, the capital of the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq, on Monday

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