The National - News

Internatio­nal flights to Erbil are suspended after referendum

- THE NATIONAL

All internatio­nal flights to Erbil in Kurdish-held northern Iraq will be suspended this evening at the request of Baghdad after a huge vote for independen­ce by the Kurds was rejected by the central government.

Results showed that 92.73 per cent of voters backed statehood in Monday’s referendum, which has sparked internatio­nal concern and angered Baghdad and its neighbours. The central government has repeatedly said that the referendum was illegal.

The vote, although non-binding, has increased tensions between the Kurds and Baghdad,as well as Turkey and Iran, both of which have sizeable Kurdish population­s.

Repercussi­ons were swift with airlines from the UAE, Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon and Qatar saying they will halt flights starting on Friday night, in line with the ban.

“All internatio­nal flights without exception to and from Erbil will stop from 6pm [local time] on Friday after a decision by the Iraqi cabinet and prime minister Haider Al Abadi,” airport director Talar Faiq Salih told Agence France-Presse.

At Erbil Internatio­nal Airport yesterday, hundreds of people – most of whom are foreigners – waited to fly out before the ban took effect.

Murat Mutlar, a Turkish citizen, said the company he worked for in Erbil ordered him to leave before today and yesterday he did not know if he would return.

“It depends on the situation here. If they make again all flights open we will come back again and continue our work,” he said.

Iraq’s Kurds faced the threat of growing isolation not just from Baghdad but also from Ankara, which has threatened to cut exports to the region.

Mr Al Abadi said Turkey agreed to deal only with Baghdad on oil exports from the self-ruled Kurdish region. While Iraqi Kurd leader Masoud Barzani

said the vote would not lead to an immediate declaratio­n of independen­ce, it should instead open the door to negotiatio­ns, an approach Mr Abadi rejected.

“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,” Mr Abadi said on Wednesday. “We will impose Iraqi law in the entire region of Kurdistan under the constituti­on.”

An overwhelmi­ng “yes” vote had been widely expected from the electorate of 4.58 million. Turnout was more than 72 per cent.

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 ISIL.

In a televised address on Tuesday, Mr Barzani had urged Mr 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 pushed back against the vote.

Lawmakers on Wednesday passed a resolution calling on Mr Abadi to “take all necessary measures to maintain Iraq’s unity” including by deploying security forces to the disputed areas.

The resolution also called for the closure of border posts with Turkey and Iran that are outside central government control.

Mr Abadi had said on Tuesday he plans to ban all internatio­nal flights to and from Kurdistan in three days unless airports in its main cities Erbil and Sulaimaniy­ah were placed under his government’s control.

Turkey fears the vote will stoke the separatist ambitions of its own sizeable 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.

Monday’s vote took place across the three northern provinces of autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan – Erbil, Sulaimaniy­ah and Dohuk – and in disputed border zones such as the oil-rich province of Kirkuk.

We assure the internatio­nal community of our willingnes­s to engage in dialogue with Baghdad MASOUD BARZANI Kurdish president

 ?? AFP ?? Passengers flying to Erbil wait in Ankara yesterday
AFP Passengers flying to Erbil wait in Ankara yesterday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates