Muscat Daily

Iraqi PM demands annulment of Kurdistan referendum

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The result of Monday’s non-binding referendum had not yet been announced, but an overwhelmi­ng ‘yes’ vote was widely expected

Baghdad, Iraq - Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al Abadi demanded on Wednesday that this week’s vote on independen­ce for the autonomous Kurdish region be annulled, as tensions soared between the Kurds and Baghdad.

The result of Monday’s nonbinding referendum had not yet been announced, but an overwhelmi­ng ‘yes’ vote was widely expected.

Longtime Iraqi Kurd leader Massud Barzani has said the vote will not lead to an immediate declaratio­n of independen­ce and should instead open the door to negotiatio­ns.

But Abadi - who rejected the referendum as illegal - told lawmakers on Wednesday there was no question of using its results as the basis for talks.

“The referendum must be annulled and dialogue initiated in the framework of the constituti­on. We will never hold talks based on the results of the referendum,” Abadi said.

“We will impose Iraqi law in the entire region of Kurdistan under the constituti­on,” he said.

Pressure has been mounting on the Kurds since the vote, not just from Baghdad but also from Ankara, with Turkey threatenin­g a range of measures including cutting off key export routes for the region.

Pursuing a long-cherished dream of statehood, the Kurds went ahead with the referendum in defiance of widespread objections, including from the United Nations and United States.

It has raised fears of unrest and the possibilit­y of a military confrontat­ion involving the Kurds, who are key allies in internatio­nally backed offensives against the militants of the Islamic State group.

In a televised address late on Tuesday, Barzani had urged Abadi ‘not to close the door to dialogue because it is dialogue that will solve problems’.

“We assure the internatio­nal community of our willingnes­s to engage in dialogue with Baghdad,” he said, insisting the referendum was not meant ‘to delimit the border (between Kurdistan and Iraq), nor to impose it de facto’.

Baghdad has steadily pushed back against the vote.

Lawmakers passed a resolution on Monday to send troops to disputed areas where the referendum took place, but there have been no signs of a deployment yet. Abadi said on Tuesday he would ban all internatio­nal flights to and from Kurdistan in three days unless airports in its main cities Arbil and Sulaimaniy­ah were placed under his government’s control.

Iraqi authoritie­s are also reported to have urged internatio­nal carriers to stop flying to the regional capital Arbil.

Lebanon’s Middle East Airlines and EgyptAir both said on Wednesday they would halt flights to Arbil this week at the request of Baghdad.

Turkey fears the vote will stoke the separatist ambitions of its own Kurdish minority and on Tuesday President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned that Iraq’s Kurds risked sparking an ‘ethnic war’. “If Barzani and the Kurdistan Regional Government do not go back on this mistake as soon as possible, they will go down in history with the shame of having dragged the region into an ethnic and sectarian war,” he said.

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 ?? (AFP) ?? This file photo shows Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al Abadi (right) being welcomed by Iraqi Kurdish leader Massud Barzani in Arbil, the capital of the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq on April 6, 2015
(AFP) This file photo shows Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al Abadi (right) being welcomed by Iraqi Kurdish leader Massud Barzani in Arbil, the capital of the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq on April 6, 2015

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