Oman Daily Observer

Big ‘yes’ vote expected for Iraqi Kurd independen­ce

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ERBIL: Iraq’s Kurds on Tuesday were expecting the announceme­nt of a big “yes” vote for independen­ce, as authoritie­s in Baghdad weighed how to respond to a referendum they considered illegal.

Large numbers turned out in northern Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region for Monday’s vote, which went ahead despite fierce objections from Baghdad, Turkey and Iran.

Votes were still being counted on Tuesday, with results expected by the end of the day and no doubt of an overwhelmi­ng outcome in favour of independen­ce.

The vote is non-binding and will not lead automatica­lly to independen­ce, but is seen by the Kurds as a major step towards a long-cherished dream of statehood.

In the regional capital Erbil, a night of fireworks, flag-waving and dancing in the streets followed the vote.

“We made a Kurdish state today,” Erbil resident Ahmad said during the celebratio­ns.

“We’re Kurdish people, we’re not Arab, we’re not Persian, we’re no one else... We’re Kurds and we’ll remain Kurds forever.”

The referendum took place peacefully, but has increased tensions between the Iraqi Kurds and their neighbours, raising fears of potential unrest. Iraq Prime Minister Haider al Abadi declared before the vote that he would take “necessary measures” to protect the country’s unity and he was due to address parliament on Wednesday. Iraqi lawmakers voted on Tuesday to send troops to disputed areas where the referendum took place but there have been no signs of a deployment so far.

Analysts say Baghdad is deeply concerned by the vote but unlikely to seek a confrontat­ion with the Kurds for now, especially as Iraqi forces continue to battle the IS group in its final bastions. Turkey, concerned the vote will stoke the separatist ambitions of its own sizeable Kurdish population, repeatedly condemned the vote as wrong-headed and dangerous.

On Tuesday, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned the Iraqi Kurds and their longtime leader Massud Barzani 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,” Erdogan said in a televised speech.

Erdogan warned on polling day that Turkey would shut its border with Iraqi Kurdistan and threatened to block key exports that flow from the region through Turkish territory.

He even suggested the possibilit­y of a cross-border incursion similar to the one Turkish forces have carried out against IS and Kurdish fighters in Syria. The vote took place in across the three northern provinces of autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan — Erbil, Sulaimaniy­ah and Dohuk — as well as in disputed border zones such as the oil-rich province of Kirkuk.

A curfew was lifted early on Tuesday on parts of the city of Kirkuk, where it had been imposed on the city centre and non-Kurdish neighbourh­oods due to fears of unrest connected with the vote. An AFP journalist saw heavy traffic and shops opening as normal in the city of about one million, which is outside the boundaries of Iraqi Kurdistan and divided between Arab, Kurdish and Turkmen population­s.

Officials reported that turnout for the referendum stood at 72 per cent, with 3.3 million of the 4.58 million registered voters taking part.

Participat­ion was lower in some parts of the region and was at only 50 per cent in Sulaimaniy­ah province, the home base of political forces opposed to Barzani.

Barzani’s opponents have accused him of seeking to empower himself through the vote and said he should have accepted a UN-backed plan to put off the referendum in favour of negotiatio­ns with Baghdad.

 ?? — AFP ?? An Iraqi man and girl ride a bicycle in Kirkuk on Tuesday after a curfew in parts of the city was lifted despite fears of unrest over a vote on independen­ce.
— AFP An Iraqi man and girl ride a bicycle in Kirkuk on Tuesday after a curfew in parts of the city was lifted despite fears of unrest over a vote on independen­ce.

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