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IRAQ WARS
Hundreds protest flag ruling in disputed Iraq town
by Staff Writers
Khanaqin, Iraq (AFP) Oct 16, 2011


Hundreds rallied in the disputed Iraqi town of Khanaqin on Sunday to demand the reversal of a central government ruling barring the flag of the autonomous Kurdish region in official buildings.

The town, which has refused to follow the directive, lies within territory claimed by both the central government and authorities in the autonomous Kurdish capital of Arbil.

US officials persistently cite unresolved territorial rows between the two authorities as one of the biggest threats to Iraq's long-term stability.

Around 700 demonstrators marched from the centre of the town, 150 kilometres (90 miles) northeast of Baghdad and near the Iranian border, to local government buildings a kilometre away, an AFP journalist at the scene said.

They carried flags of the Kurdish region, demanding that government buildings in Khanaqin be allowed to hoist both it and the national flag of Iraq. They also called for an apology from Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.

The protesters shouted "Long live Kurdistan!" and "Khanaqin is Kurdish!" during their rally.

The demonstration came a day after Kamal Kirkuki, speaker of the Kurdish regional parliament, told reporters at a news conference that "violating the sanctity of Kurdistan's flag is unacceptable."

Khanaqin mayor Mohammed al-Mullah Hamed said the town received the ruling on Tuesday.

Kurdish authorities want to incorporate Khanaqin and a swathe of territory running from Iraq's border with Iran to its frontier with Syria into their three-province autonomous region, a claim fiercely opposed by Baghdad.

Tensions remain over the zone.

They rose markedly in late February when, amid nationwide protests, Kurdish peshmerga fighters shifted southwest towards Kirkuk, the oil-rich ethnically-mixed city at the centre of the dispute, in what they said was a move to protect it.

The peshmerga eventually pulled back in late March.

Related Links
Iraq: The first technology war of the 21st century




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