Iraqi Kurdistan Moves Ahead With Independence Referendum, Despite Outside Pressure
Iraqi Kurdistan Moves Ahead With Independence Referendum, Despite Outside Pressure
Defying almost every major power in the region, the government of Iraqi Kurdistan organized and carried out a referendum billed as the first step toward independence from Baghdad.As voting stations closed yesterday, an estimated 80% of registered voters were reported to have cast ballots. Many, according to The Guardian, felt the poll went beyond the autonomous region’s demand of full independence from the rest of Iraq – it stoked fears in Turkey, Iran, and Syria, of stoking a broader demand for Kurdish independence.On top of demanding a full breakup with Baghdad, the referendum also offered residents of the Iraqi city of Kirkuk to become part of the Kurdistan Autonomous Region.While Kirkuk has historically fallen outside of the KAR’s administration, the situation changed drastically with the rise of the Islamic State in 2014 and 2015.Kurdish defense forces – known colloquially and locally as the Peshmerga – helped liberate tracts of the city from ISIS. Since then, the Peshmerga and Kurdish politicians and Erbil have effectively governed the city, which is surrounded by vast deposits of oil.In response to the Kirkuk question, Iraq’s parliament on Monday debated sending soldiers into the area surrounding Kirkuk.Despite the central government’s apparent unease with the referendum, residents of Kirkuk interviewed by The Guardian were in a festive mood.“This is better than the Islamic festivals,” said 62-year old Abdul Kareem Karakash, a working blacksmith. “It is the best day of my life.”Karakash’s relative, Mala Rasul Mamish, 40, said, “I hope that the West will see this as a historic day, and not just as the project of one political party. It is much more than that. So much of our blood has been spilled for being Kurds. The Iraqi government has done to us things that even infidels wouldn’t do.”The response from neighboring countries to the referendum has ranged from cautious to threatening.
A woman shows her ink-stained finger during Kurds independence referendum in Halabja, Iraq. REUTERS/Alaa Al-Marjani
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'The best day of my life': Iraqi Kurds vote in independence referendumIraqi Kurdistan votes in independence referendum
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.