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				Almost all foreign airlines suspended flights to the airports of 
				Erbil and Sulaimaniya, in compliance with a notice from the 
				government in Baghdad, which has control over the country's 
				airspace. 
				 
				Lufthansa and Austrian were the only carriers to have kept at 
				least one flight still scheduled after the deadline. But a 
				spokesman for Lufthansa Group said on Friday morning it was 
				checking whether it would have to cancel flights. 
				 
				Lufthansa flies once a week to Erbil on Saturdays, while its 
				unit Austrian Airlines flies daily. Domestic flights are still 
				permitted to and from Kurdistan, and so travelers are expected 
				to get there mostly by transiting via Baghdad's airport, which 
				will come under strain from the extra traffic. 
				 
				Kurdish airports handle 40 to 50 percent of Iraq's total 
				international traffic, Taher Abdallah, Sulaimaniya airport's 
				director general, told reporters on Wednesday. 
				 
				Check-in operations at Erbil's international airport were 
				running smoothly on Friday morning and there was no sign of 
				disruption. 
				 
				Iraq's Kurds endorsed secession by nine to one in a vote on 
				Monday that angered Baghdad and other governments who fear the 
				referendum could lead to renewed conflict in the region. 
				 
				The United Nations and United States have both offered to help 
				mediate between Kurdistan and Baghdad. 
				 
				(Reporting by Maher Chmaytelli; editing by Andrew Roche) 
			[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
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