Iraq, Turkey up ante
Iraq and Turkey yesterday stepped up the pressure on Iraqi Kurdistan over its planned independence referendum, as the governor of oil-rich Kirkuk province that decided to take part in the vote was sacked.
Parliament, at Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's request, fired the governor of the northern province, Najm Eddine Karim, in a unanimous vote by 173 MPs present in the house.
With tensions rising, the Iraqi parliament on Tuesday voted to oppose plans by leaders of the autonomous Kurdish region in northern Iraq to hold the non-binding September 25 referendum.
The independence vote has faced strong opposition from the federal government in Baghdad as well as neighbouring Iran and Turkey, which fear it will stoke separatist aspirations among their own sizeable Kurdish minorities.
Critics of the vote include the United States, the European Union and even some members of Iraq's 5.5 million-strong Kurdish minority.
Turkey, a strong opponent, warned Iraqi Kurdish leaders yesterday that any referendum would "have a cost".
Their "insistence on the referendum despite all friendly advice will definitely have a cost", the foreign ministry in Ankara said, criticising their "erroneous approach".
The provincial council of Kirkuk -- which is contested by Baghdad and autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan and home to diverse communities, including Arabs and Turkmen -- voted at the end of August to take part in the controversial referendum.
Iraqi Kurdish leader Massud Barzani, who called the referendum, has said the vote would go ahead because "all other bids" to secure Kurdish rights had failed.
The referendum could lead to the independence of Iraqi Kurdistan, an oil-rich region in the country's rugged, mountainous north which gained de facto autonomy in 1991.
The region, whose people were brutally repressed under Saddam Hussein, won autonomy in 2005 after the dictator's ouster under a constitution which set up a federal republic in Iraq.
Iraqi Kurdistan, home to around 5.5 million Kurds, is made up of three provinces that are run by an autonomous regional government and protected by their own security services.
Comments