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Iraq Kurd leader: 'Time has come' for statehood referendum

HAIDER

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Baghdad (AFP) - Iraqi Kurdish leader Massud Barzani has declared that the "time has come" for the country's Kurds to hold a referendum on statehood, a move likely to raise tensions with Baghdad.


But even if the various political challenges to independence are resolved, the major economic problems the region faces due to low oil prices are another bar to Kurdish independence.

"The time has come and the conditions are now suitable for the people to make a decision through a referendum on their future," Barzani said in a statement released Wednesday.

"This referendum would not necessarily lead to (an) immediate declaration of statehood, but rather to know the will and opinion of the people of Kurdistan about their future," said Barzani, who has remained in power despite the expiration of his term as president.

Barzani, who has made similar calls in the past, did not specify when the vote would take place.

Asked about the timing of the referendum, Ali Awni, a leader in Barzani's Kurdistan Democratic Party, said that "today is better than tomorrow," but did not give a specific date.

Awni said that the Kurds have gained international sympathy from fighting the Islamic State group, and that now "we must show the world the will of our people (for) independence and the right of self-determination."



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Kurdish Peshmerga fighters have been a key partner in the war against the Islamic State group in Ira …
Iraq's Kurds are a key US partner in the war against IS and have been some of the most effective forces fighting the jihadists.

But both the referendum on independence -- which Iraq's federal government opposes -- and the issue of which areas it covers will raise tensions between the autonomous Kurdish region and Baghdad, potentially complicating anti-IS efforts.

- Economic challenges -

The region officially includes three provinces, but Kurdish forces now hold parts of four more over which the federal government wants to maintain control.

Federal forces fled positions in various northern areas in the summer of 2014 when facing an offensive by IS, allowing Kurdish forces to gain or solidify control over areas claimed by both them and Baghdad.

Oil-rich Kirkuk province, which is mostly held by Kurdish peshmerga forces, will be a particular point of contention due to the wealth of natural resources there.

Turkey's assent would also be essential for moves toward Kurdish statehood to proceed, as Ankara is a key economic partner of Iraqi Kurdistan, both in terms of oil exports and other trade and investments.

Barzani has a close relationship with the Turkish government, but Ankara is also battling the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) rebel group, and having a Kurdish state on its southern border, or even moving toward one, could increase calls for similar action within its territory.

And while there is broad support for the idea of independence in Iraqi Kurdistan, the sharp divisions among the various Kurdish political parties would pose a significant challenge to the formation and successful administration of a state.

Iraqi Kurdistan has been independently exporting oil via Turkey from four northern provinces since a deal between it and Baghdad on oil and revenue sharing collapsed last year.

Both Baghdad and Kurdistan are facing a financial crisis due to plunging oil prices, on which they rely for the vast majority of government funds.

But the Kurds do not have the same access to the loans and bond markets that Baghdad can turn to in order to stay financially afloat.

Salaries for some Kurdish government employees are months in arrears, and some have gone on strike to protest unpaid wages.
 
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Time is ripe for Kurdish state, Kurds should not waste this golden opportunity to have a state of their own.
 
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Well, is it statement or tip of iceburg ?
 
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Doubt it. Iran and Iraq would declare war on Iraqi Kurdistan and it would not be pretty.
 
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Doubt it. Iran and Iraq would declare war on Iraqi Kurdistan and it would not be pretty.
Iraq ans Syria are weak, as I say united only Syria Kurdish and Iraq Kurdish. Iran Kurdish will be leave alone.
 
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It will unite Syria kurdish and Turkish kurdish.
That's remain to be seen...It is going to be a difficult for the Kurd to have one state, I see two states , Syrian-iraqis and the other in Turkish area..
 
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The question is, which countries would recognize Iraqi Kurdistan as a sovereign state?
 
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Doubt it. Iran and Iraq would declare war on Iraqi Kurdistan and it would not be pretty.
It is going to be hard for either country to stop something inevitable. But having said that, it is not going to be a cake walk .
 
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It is going to be hard for either country to stop something inevitable. But having said that, it is not going to be a cake walk .


Inevitable? Perhaps you might think Uyghurs should have their own state. Perhaps you might think Tibetans should have their own state. Perhaps you might think Catalans should have their own state. Perhaps you might think Chechens should have their own state. Nuuuuuuuuuuuuuu. Not gonna happen.

This isn't the old days when you can fight your way to independence.
 
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Iraq ans Syria are weak, as I say united only Syria Kurdish and Iraq Kurdish. Iran Kurdish will be leave alone.
EU trap Erdogan by involving him Syria. But, Turkey won't tolerate this move at any cost. During Syrian civil war, Kurds took full advantage of situation, organized and trained their men. Also, politically established themselves in Iraq and used as launching pad. Let's wait for Turkish reaction.....
 
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Doubt it. Iran and Iraq would declare war on Iraqi Kurdistan and it would not be pretty.

Kurds in Iraq and Syria have the muscle to declare independence.

And the political support from the US conservative factions.

But this isn't the old days neither will this be like South Sudan's referendum, because George Clooney can't offer his face to liberal women to get behind this.
 
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Kurds in Iraq and Syria have the muscle to declare independence.

And the political support from the US conservative factions.

But this isn't the old days neither will this be like South Sudan's referendum, because George Clooney can't offer his face to liberal women to get behind this.


South Sudan actually fought Sudan for many years and eventually won their own independence through war. If Kurds want their own state, they must fight a war of independence. No country would recognize them merely through a referendum. Catalans did a referendum that passed with splendid colors and in the end no one recognized Catalan statehood.
 
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Kurds in Iraq and Syria have the muscle to declare independence.

And the political support from the US conservative factions.

But this isn't the old days neither will this be like South Sudan's referendum, because George Clooney can't offer his face to liberal women to get behind this.
Plus, Israel and Eu also support this division .

German trained Kurdish soldiers.

1*RaIXrjps0DdRK4qE_NNKgg.jpeg
 
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