Iraq extends air blockade of Kurdistan by 3 months

Anti-Baghdad sentiments run high in the Iraqi Kurdistan region after the government imposed the air blockade in September. (AFP)

IRBIL: Iraq has extended by three months a ban on international flights to the autonomous Kurdish region, a senior official at Irbil airport in the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan said on Monday.
The federal government in Baghdad first imposed the air blockade in September after Iraqi Kurdistan voted overwhelmingly for independence in a non-binding referendum rejected as illegal by the central government.
It was extended in December for two months and was to run until Feb. 28 but the authorities decided to renew it for three months, the official said.
“We have been informed by the Civil Aviation Authority in Baghdad that the ban on international flights to and from Irbil and Sulaimaniyah airports has been extended until the end of May,” he said. “Only internal flights are authorized.”
A spokesman for Prime Minister Haider Abadi’s office confirmed the ban was extended.
“No date had been set to lift the ban,” Saad Al-Hadithi told AFP. “It will depend on the transfer of the airport’s administration to the federal government and when that will be done the ban will be lifted,” he added.
According to Hadithi, “progress” has been made during negotiations involving Kurdish and federal government officials on several issues, including customs, passports and visas.
“But the issue of the control of security at the airports has not been solved yet, although there is a will to reach a solution to this problem,” he added.
Before the controversial September vote on independence, the authorities in Kurdistan were in charge of all these issues but after the poll that angered Baghdad, the federal government demanded to take control.
Since the flight ban went into force, all Kurdistan-bound international flights have been rerouted to Baghdad, which has also imposed entry visas to foreigners wishing to visit the Kurdish region.
The flight ban was part of a battery of penalties inflicted on the Kurds as Baghdad sought to nullify the poll, with federal forces also seizing disputed oil-rich regions.