Kurdish city gassed by Saddam hopes referendum heralds better days

* Kurds seek independence in vote on Monday

* Halabja seems sceptical, wants better services

* Rundown city still to recover from poison gas attack

By Raya Jalabi and Michael Georgy

HALABJA, Iraq, Sept 24 (Reuters) - When poison gas killed thousands of Kurds in Halabja in 1988, its residents never imagined they would ever escape Saddam Hussein's grip, let alone vote one day in a referendum on secession from Iraq.

The long-oppressed Kurds across northern Iraq are expected to get the chance to vote on Monday despite fierce opposition from the Baghdad government and regional powers who feel threatened by the referendum.

It will be a bittersweet moment for the people of Halabja, a rundown city of around 75,000 people still facing the after-effects of the attack by Iraqi government forces.

At a memorial to honour the victims is a statue of Omar Khawar, whose image holding his two dead twin babies which appeared in photographs around the world has come to symbolize the tragedy in Halabja.

Halabja residents interviewed by Reuters said they would vote "Yes". But they were only cautiously optimistic.

They wonder whether feuding Kurdish political parties can deliver on promises of a viable independent state when basic needs such as specialised medical care, jobs and infrastructure have not been met.

"He would rest peacefully knowing that we will vote Yes," said Khawar's nephew Borhan Gharib.

"We think freedom is better than anything. There is no country that gets independence without a price."

SADDAM'S BRUTALITY AGAINST KURDS

The referendum will be the culmination of a century-long struggle for self-determination for the Kurds. When the Middle was carved up by the West in a deal in 1916 after the fall of the Ottoman empire, the Kurds were the largest ethnic group without a state.

The region's roughly 30 million ethnic Kurds were left scattered across four countries – Iraq, Iran, Turkey and Syria.

Though they were widely mistreated, the Kurds suffered a particularly brutal fate in Iraq, where Saddam Hussein gassed them, buried them in mass graves and gave their land to Arabs.

Halabja marked the peak of his campaign against the Kurds.

Saddam accused the Halabja Kurds of siding with Iran during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war. The gas attack was a turning point, winning the Iraqi Kurds worldwide sympathy.

Five thousand people, mostly women and children, were killed and thousands more wounded starting at 1153 a.m. on March 16, 1988 and more are still suffering from cancer and other diseases related to poison gas.

Yet, near the memorial is a hospital built for victims of the tragedy -- construction has been completed but the facility was never opened.