Kurdistan celebrates Eid during month of historic vote on independence
Commenting on the referendum set for September 25, Rasul said that the vote will include everywhere “where Peshmerga is,” calling such areas Kurdistani.
Video: Vice President Rasul was accompanied by other military and political figures to the frontlines Friday morning.
President Masoud Barzani congratulated the people of Kurdistan on the occasion of the holiday — in particular “the family of the martyrs” — while thanking Kurdish security forces for protecting the nation.
“I hope that the people of Kurdistan with their yes-vote for independence would make September 25 a big national Eid,” Barzani said adding that may the people of Kurdistan celebrate the date as the day of independence for years to come.
Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani noted the fact that the nation is celebrating the occasion at a time of crises, notably the financial crisis that has been ongoing since early-2014.
He said he understands the difficult situation the people are in, but added that it also comes at a moment when people are heading to determine a “bright” future for themselves with their vote later this month.
Unlike other days, many people in Kurdistan have a main meal for breakfast that traditionally includes cooked dried apricot, rice, white beans, red meat and increasingly chicken.
The number of tourists visiting the Kurdistan over the Ramadan holidays reached 243,000 people — many coming from the rest of Iraq — generating an estimated $73 million in tourism revenues.
While about 70 percent of the tourists come from the rest of Iraq, the rest are foreign tourists from Iran, Turkey and other parts of the world.
"Iraqi Kurdistan is one of the most breath-takingly beautiful and fun places I've ever visited in the Middle East," said Michael Knights, a Boston-based Lafer fellow of The Washington Institute, who has often visited and throughly researched Kurdistan and the wider Gulf region.
His remarks were made during a podcast released by his institute on Thursday.
"I would recommend a visit to Iraqi Kurdistan for almost any person who likes adventure tourism, or archaelogy, or hitch hiking," Knights continued.