Bangkok Post

Kurds offer to freeze independen­ce bid

Regional leaders seek Iraq military ceasefire

-

IRBIL: Iraqi Kurdish leaders offered yesterday to freeze the outcome of last month’s vote for independen­ce, taking a step back in a major crisis that prompted Baghdad to seize swaths of disputed territory.

The offer came as world powers scrambled to avert any further escalation of the conflict between the key allies in the fight against the Islamic State group that has seen more than 30 combatants killed.

Washington, Moscow and the United Nations have all pressed Iraqi Kurdish leader Massud Barzani to open talks with Baghdad on a way out of the crisis sparked by the fateful Sept 25 vote that he called.

The Kurdistan Regional Government said it would “propose to the [federal] government and Iraqi public opinion ... the freezing of the results of the referendum ... and the start of an open dialogue ... on the basis of the constituti­on”.

It also called for “an immediate ceasefire and cessation of military operations in Kurdistan”.

Since early last week, Iraqi federal troops and allied militia have retaken virtually all of the territory held by the Kurds outside their longstandi­ng three-province autonomous region in the north.

In most areas the Kurds withdrew without a fight, although in the Little Zab valley close to their regional capital, Irbil, there was fighting and in all at least 31 combatants were killed.

The independen­ce referendum deeply divided Iraqi Kurdish leaders and many commanders ordered their forces to pull back without resisting.

The loss of so much territory, including the major city of Kirkuk and lucrative oil fields, dealt a huge blow to Kurdish dreams of economic self-sufficienc­y and eventual independen­ce.

Mr Barzani’s longtime political rival, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, had opposed the independen­ce vote and backed a UN plan for negotiatio­ns on wider Kurdish autonomy.

The Iraqi constituti­on adopted during the US-led occupation of 2003-11 provides for plebiscite­s in the disputed areas on their possibile incorporat­ion in the autonomous Kurdish region.

Washington has made clear that while it will not take sides in the conflict between its Iraq allies, it does not regard Baghdad’s reoccupati­on of the disputed areas as a fait accompli.

“The reassertio­n of federal authority over disputed areas in no way changes their status — they remain disputed until their status is resolved in accordance with the Iraqi constituti­on,” State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said on Friday.

The United Nations said on Tuesday that it stands ready to broker talks.

UN envoy Jan Kubis “expressed confidence that despite the recent tensions, Iraq will be able to ride this crisis”.

“Both sides publicly expressed their willingnes­s to engage in dialogue and negotiatio­ns on the basis of the constituti­on. The UN is ready to assist, if requested,” he said.

“We are confident that the government of Iraq and the Kurdistan regional government, just like they banded together to defeat Daesh [the Islamic State], can work hand in hand to overcome their difference­s through dialogue and away from confrontat­ion to resolve all outstandin­g issues in a manner that is consistent with the constituti­on.”

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, whose domestic prestige has been sharply boosted by the return of the disputed territorie­s to federal control, has been on a tour of regional countries which share his hostility to Kurdish moves towards secession.

He also held talks in Baghdad on Monday with US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.

He was due in Ankara for talks with Turkish leaders after press time last night, who are particular­ly opposed to any talk of Kurdish separatism having fought a more than three-decade-long insurgency among its own Kurdish minority, the region’s largest.

Iraq’s border with Turkey is currently all in Kurdish hands and Mr Abadi has said that top of the agenda of his talks will be his demand that the federal government retake control of border crossings.

Among regional powers, only Israel backs Kurdish ambitions — something of a poisoned blessing. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Tuesday that Israel had “great sympathy” for Kurdish aspiration­s and that the world should concern itself with their wellbeing.

 ?? NYT ?? A man waves the Kurdish flag after the results of an independen­ce referendum were announced in Irbil last month.
NYT A man waves the Kurdish flag after the results of an independen­ce referendum were announced in Irbil last month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand