Protests rock Iraqi Kurdistan over failed independence referendum

Protests rock Iraqi Kurdistan over failed independence referendum
Protests in Iraqi Kurdistan saw at least three people killed and over 80 injured on Tuesday, as anger raged for a second day at the disastrous fallout from September's referendum.
2 min read
19 December, 2017
Protests swept Iraqi Kurdistan for second day over failed referendum [Anadolu]

At least three people were killed and over 80 injured by violent unrest as Kurdish protesters demonstrated on Tuesday years of austerity and unpaid public sector salaries.

Protesters in Iraqi Kurdistan torched a mayor's office and stormed a ruling party building as anger raged for a second day at the disastrous fallout from a September independence referendum.

The vote delivered a resounding "yes" but drew sweeping reprisals from Baghdad which have dealt a heavy blow to the autonomous region's economy.

In its second largest city Sulaimaniyah, security forces fired in the air to disperse demonstrators marching on the central Saray Square, an AFP correspondent reported.

Roadblocks sprang up across the city on major roads and around the offices of the main political parties.

Sulaimaniyah is a bastion of opposition to former regional president Massoud Barzani, who organised the independence vote, but all five of the region's main political parties saw their offices attacked on Monday.

Protests were also held in the Sulaimaniyah province towns of Rania and Kifri, and in Halabja and Koysinjaq in neighbouring Arbil province.

In Koysinjaq, demonstrators set fire to the mayor's office, while in Kifri hundreds stormed the offices of Barzani's Kurdistan Democratic Party after pelting the building with stones, witnesses said.

"You're incapable - incapable of defending the disputed areas and incapable of ruling the Kurdistan region," one demonstrator shouted.

The disputed areas are a large swathe of historically Kurdish-majority territory outside the autonomous region that Kurdish leaders have long wanted to incorporate in it.

The Kurds took control of many of them during the fight against Islamic State (IS) from 2014.

But after the independence referendum, federal forces retook nearly all of them, including the large city of Kirkuk and its nearby oilfields, which accounted for a major part of the autonomous government's revenues.

Barzani announced he was stepping down in late October after the independence vote backfired.

Legislative and presidential elections in the region due on November 1 were postponed because of the turmoil.

Prime minister Nechirvan Barzani, the ex-president's nephew, has pledged to hold the polls over the next three months.