Times of Oman

Abadi urges Kurds to suspend secession vote

Kurdish leadership in northern Iraq showed no sign of flinching despite coming under intense internatio­nal and regional pressure to call off the September 25 vote

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BAGHDAD: Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi said on Monday he had formally demanded the Kurdistan region suspend an independen­ce referendum that regional neighbours and Western powers fear could undermine a campaign against IS militants.

Turkey, which like Iran harbours fears of Kurdish separatism on its own territory, carried out military exercises at the Iraqi border. Iran warned of unspecifie­d consequenc­es if the Iraqi Kurds went ahead with their plans.

But the Kurdish leadership in northern Iraq showed no sign of flinching despite coming under intense internatio­nal and regional pressure to call off the September 25 vote.

Kurdish forces have, with U.S. backing, been in the forefront of the battle against IS in Iraq and Syria. But the Kurdish involvemen­t strains relations between Washington and Ankara.

The Iraqi Supreme Federal Court approved Abadi’s demand to consider “the breakaway of any region or province from Iraq as unconstitu­tional”, his office said in a statement.

“Holding (the referendum) will lead to dangerous outcomes, resulting in the division of Iraq and threatenin­g civil peace.”

The court, in charge of settling disputes between the central government and the provinces, “ordered” the government of the autonomous Kurdish region to stop the referendum.

The court’s order bears legal weight but it cannot be implemente­d in practice in the Kurdish region which has its own police and its own government, led by Massoud Barzani.

Iraqi state TV said the court had issued an “order to stop the procedures of the referendum planned on September 25 (..) by the Kurdistan regional presidency”.

The United Nations, the United States, Britain and France have renewed over the past 48 hours their rejection of the vote, seen as a distractio­n from the war on IS militants who continue to occupy parts of Iraq and Syria. They called on Erbil, the seat of the Kurdistan Regional Government, to talk with Baghdad to resolve land and power sharing disputes.

Iran also demanded restraint from the Iraqi Kurds. “Any damage to this strategic principle (of Iraq’s unity) would lead to the revision of and serious alteration in the existing cooperatio­n between Iran and Iraq’s Kurdistan region,” said Ali Shamkhani, the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, according to staterun Press TV.

Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim has said the planned September 25 referendum is an issue of national security, and warned that Turkey will take any necessary steps in response.

Around a hundred Turkish military vehicles, mostly tanks, took part in exercises near the Habur border gate, a crossing point into Iraq, the private Dogan news agency said on Monday. Vehicles carrying missiles and howitzers also participat­ed.

Turkey especially has large commercial investment­s in northern Iraq and long cultivated close relations with Erbil, despite a conflict on its own territory with Kurdish separatist­s that has run since 1984. Oil is a central issue.

The Kurdish regional government announced on Monday that it had agreed with Russian oil major Rosneft to invest in its gas pipeline infrastruc­ture and to export large supplies of gas to Turkey and Europe. Kurdistan has been exporting oil independen­tly from the central government in Baghdad since 2014 and Kremlincon­trolled Rosneft joined the list of buyers this year.

 ?? Agency, DHA via Reuters — Mehmet Selim Yalcin/Dogan News ?? MOUNTING TENSIONS: Turkish soldiers on an armoured personnel carrier (APC) are seen during a military exercise near the Turkish-Iraqi border in Silopi, Turkey on Monday.
Agency, DHA via Reuters — Mehmet Selim Yalcin/Dogan News MOUNTING TENSIONS: Turkish soldiers on an armoured personnel carrier (APC) are seen during a military exercise near the Turkish-Iraqi border in Silopi, Turkey on Monday.

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