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How deep is Turkey’s Sinjar entanglement? how Erdogan and Barzani dividing Kurds

March 8, 2017 By administrator

Fehim Taştekin is a Turkish journalist and a columnist for Turkey Pulse

By Fehim Taştekin

Turkey, which has developed rather odd relationships with some of its neighbors in recent years because of its reckless foreign policy, has begun treating Kurdish notables coming from Iraqi Kurdistan as official leaders.

Nowadays, Barzani is received as a reputable state leader and the Kurdistan flag is hoisted next to the Turkish flag. During his latest visit Feb. 27, the official reception menu in Ankara was printed in Kurdish. While Turkey adheres to combative relations with Kurds inside and outside the country, relations with Barzani are based on economic interests such as oil and Turkey’s design to use Kurds against Kurds.

For a while now, Barzani has been goaded into a policy of balancing Rojava’s leading political party, the Democratic Union Party (PYD), and its military arm, the People’s Protection Units (YPG), with Syria’s pro-Barzani Kurdish National Council (KNC) and the peshmerga of Rojava (officially the Democratic Federal System of Northern Syria). In Iraq, Turkey expects Barzani to oust the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) from Sinjar. Turkey fears the PKK will turn Sinjar into an operations base to facilitate access between Syria and Iraq.

Following Barzani’s latest visit to Turkey, Syrian Kurds organized by Barzani’s Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) under the name of “Roj peshmergas” were sent to Sinjar March 2. The Yazidis’ Sinjar Resistance Units (YBS) in Iraq, trained by the PKK, did not allow them to enter. Clashes erupted and there were casualties on both sides.

According to information provided to Al-Monitor by journalist Ali Dagli, who was in Sinjar, tension broke out when front-loaders sent by Roj peshmergas started digging trenches between Hanesor and Sinune. A group of local women tried to stop the machinery. The angry women said they don’t trust the peshmerga and asked why they were digging in places where the Islamic State (IS) no longer existed. Why didn’t they instead go to the front lines to fight for Mosul, they asked.

On March 3, tension turned to clashes. A cease-fire was arranged within hours, but tension persists. During the cease-fire, the peshmerga brought more vehicles and increased their strength to about 500 fighters. The YBS interpreted the reinforcements as preparation for battle and told the Roj peshmergas they wouldn’t be allowed passage. “Roj peshmergas want to capture Hanesor, make it a base for themselves, and sever the connection between Sinjar and the Rojava border,” Dagli said.

In Sinjar’s town center and in Sinune, the YBS maintains checkpoints just as Iraqi peshmerga forces do. The YBS controls Hanesor. Between Sinjar and Sinune, there is a small Iraqi police presence and two battalions of Shiite militia (Popular Mobilization Units) near the Arab village of Madiba. There are around 100-130 fighters of the PKK’s People’s Defense Forces (HPG) to support the YBS in Sinjar. The road to Hanesor is important for providing a connection between Sinjar and Rojava territory.

Local sources believe that within the Roj peshmergas there are both Iraqi peshmerga forces and Turkish intelligence personnel. Renowned Yazidi sociologist Azad Baris blamed both the KDP and the PKK for exploiting the fragile situation.

“Many Yazidis are grateful to the YPG and the HPG. Many don’t trust the KDP anymore after what happened in 2014,” when thousands of Yazidis were massacred by IS after the KDP allegedly abandoned them. “Yazidis are also uneasy with the Sunni leanings of peshmerga. But some of them cooperate with the KDP for monetary or political reasons. Moreover, there is a Yazidi unit under Qasim Shesho that is backed by the KDP. They incite the YBS by asking what Turkey’s Kurds are doing in Sinjar. The ratio of non-Yazidis in the YBS is not more than 5%,” Baris told Al-Monitor.

He added, “Some of them have come from places such as Hanover, Germany, but they are originally from Sinjar. In 2014, hundreds of Yazidis returned to Sinjar to defend their homeland and joined the self-defense forces. You can’t simply dislodge and send them away now. Some of them hail from Sheyhanli of south Kurdistan. The Iraqi central government recognized them as a legal force and began paying them salaries. There are now about 3,500. Every Yazidi has the right to defend his land. The question is with those assisting the self-defense forces — the pro-Apo [imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan] elements. Their opponents say there is no place for pro-Apo ideology on this land.”

Barzani frequently declares that he won’t allow infighting among the Kurds. Sending Roj peshmergas instead of Iraqi peshmerga forces to Sinjar inevitably led to hostilities between pro-Apo Yazidis and Syrian Kurds. Some say Barzani, using this tactic, can claim he has kept his word on preventing internecine clashes while preventing his KDP from getting involved. But Roj peshmergas are not denying that they get their orders directly from Barzani and the Peshmerga General Command.

Baris said this situation — the KDP-supported Yazidis challenging PKK-oriented Yazidis and the PKK — is based on two main strategies: “First of all, there is the obvious tactic of instigating the local people to fight each other. The KDP has never really adopted the Yazidis because of their faith. Yazidis never feel safe. If Yazidis are split, then the KDP’s domination will be easier. Second, they are using the foreign Kurds of Syria to hit at other foreign Kurds from Turkey. They keep saying the YBS is a foreign force. I don’t want to dismiss the charges that Turkey has been influential, but keep in mind, whether Turkey wants it or not, Barzani’s intolerance is not limited to the PKK presence. He is also against the Yazidis’ defending themselves and their aspiration for an autonomous structure. The KDP has never shared any of our pains and casualties and has never listened to any of our pleas. Even today they don’t listen to us. Anyone who prefers brutal hordes such as IS to Kurds and Yazidis and attacks our homeland will always be cursed by Yazidis.”

In 2014, when the PKK assumed the protection of the Yazidis after KDP peshmerga forces withdrew from the battlefield against IS, the pro-Apo ideology suddenly became the most prominent military and political entity of the area. The PKK’s military wing, the HPG, by blocking IS at Sinjar Mountain, and the YPG, by opening a corridor from Syria to Sinjar, practically saved the Yazidis. While the KDP couldn’t recover from its loss of credibility, the HPG organized the Yazidis and helped them set up the YBS. Although peshmerga forces eventually returned and lost hundreds of their fighters battling IS, Yazidis still stayed loyal to the PKK.

As for Turkey’s relevance in developments in Sinjar, the pro-PKK media keeps saying the attack against Sinjar was guided by Turkey and the Roj peshmergas who, they say, were actually members of Turkey’s National Intelligence Organization.

Persistent declarations by Turkish leaders that Sinjar can’t be allowed to become a second Qandil — the main Kurdish headquarters in the Qandil Mountains in northern Iraq — are naturally cited as confirming Turkey’s role.

According to high-level diplomatic sources talking to Turkish media, Ankara continues to cooperate with Erbil (Iraqi Kurdistan’s capital) against the PKK presence in Sinjar and in Makhmour, Iraq, and Turkey will intervene when the day comes. When the Mosul operation is concluded, then peshmerga forces will be able to transfer fighters to Sinjar and Makhmour. Should the Kurdish government want its help, Turkey will set up training bases around Kirkuk and in some northern areas.

In December, Turkey’s Deputy Prime Minister Veysi Kaynak declared, “We will never allow a new Qandil to emerge at Sinjar. Our biggest hope is for Barzani to succeed, but if that doesn’t happen we will do whatever is necessary with the Turkish army.”

Military action against Sinjar wouldn’t be easy because the town lacks defined boundaries in military terms and could trigger even worse, bloodier strife between the Kurds. The Baghdad government would also see such action as an attack.

The United States and Russia don’t want the Kurds to fight each other, at least as long as the IS threat exists. The cease-fire at Sinjar was arranged by the United States. Iraq’s central government is unhappy with Kurdish aspirations to take over more disputed territory, hence its support for the YBS. Baghdad, which had cut off the salaries of Yazidi forces last year, has resumed payments because of protests by Turkey, which didn’t want Yazidis to be dependent on the PKK.

Yazidi agony over the massacres suffered and the sale of Yazidi women in slave markets is resonating worldwide, and the first European assistance to the YBS is trickling in. One European Union member country sent the Yazidi self-defense forces 5,000 military uniforms. It’s not going to be easy to end the conflict between the PKK and the KDP. For many people, avoiding bloodshed will be considered a sufficient success story.

According to former Turkish Consul-General at Erbil Aydin Selcen, when Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) President Massoud Barzani used to come to Turkey, he was received in Istanbul and not in Ankara, the capital. The meetings were not held in palaces but at less-impressive locations. The Kurdistan flag was never displayed. Meetings were held in Arabic, not Kurdish. To give the impression that the meetings were unofficial, nobody wore ties. In short, everything was done to prevent the meetings from being interpreted as recognition of Kurdistan.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, kdp, Kurd, Turkey

Barzani’s failed policies could lead to his family’s departure from Kurdistan!

March 1, 2017 By administrator

KDP party leader Massoud Barzani, Iraqi Kurdistan. Photo: AFP

By Hamma Mirwaisi | Exclusive to Ekurd.net

Kurdish people are loyal to leaders. It is hard to convince Kurds to accept new ideas, but when they were accepting ideas, it is hard for them to give it up easily.

It took few generations for Barzani family to take over South Kurdistan. Turkish Ottoman Empire hangs Sheikh Abdul Salam Barzani in the year 1914 in the city of Mosul-Iraq after he revolted against Turkish Empire.

The stars of Barzani family rise among Kurds in that part of Kurdistan because of the Turks murder of Sheikh Abdul Salam Barzani. His brother Sheikh Ahmed led the Barzani tribal revolt for a while, which followed by his younger brother Mullah Mustafa Barzani the father of current Barzani tribal leader Massoud Barzani.

From 1946 to 1979 Mullah Mustafa led Kurdish revolution with the support of Israel, Iran and the US. Jalal Talabani from Talabani Sheikh family challenged Barzani leadership, which resulted in the division of South Kurdistan into two regions.

Barzani established political party called Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) without knowing the meaning of the word Democrat. After the split of KDP in the year 1963 Ibraham Ahmed, the father in law of Jalal Talabani establishing the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) without knowing the meaning of word Patriot. The process of forming political parties become similar to open the new business in Kurdistan especially in South Kurdistan as the sources of income to make a living through corruption.

There are communist, Islamist, Socialist, Democrat, Patriot, Conservative on and on without knowing anything about such ideologies.

In the middle of the cause in Kurdistan came a group of young Kurds under the leadership of Abdullah Ocalan to form the Kurdistan Workers’ Party or PKK (Kurdish: Partiya Karkerên Kurdistanê‎) started as Maoist or Marxist–Leninist political party. But in time the ideologies of PKK changed with the leader evolution. In time Abdullah Ocalan becomes knowledgeable enough to become one of the major world philosophers in his own, surpassing any other philosopher before him because he did solve women problem in the world.

Today KDP of Barzani is losing members and support of Kurdish people because Massoud Barzani and his brothers, nephew and children’s are submerged in corruption.

The PUK of Talabani is not better than KDP of Barzani, Jalal Talabani’s wife and his two sons are involved in the crime of corruption. His younger son Qubad Talabani suppose to be smarter than his older brother is working with Barzani family to share oil wealth of Kurdistan. Qubad married American Jewish girl, which give him a chance to be close to Israeli Government as the major protector of Barzani and Talabani families rule in South Kurdistan.

Iraqi Kurds are hopeless to be liberated from Barzani and Talabani yokes. Under the guidance of Israel Barzani allied with Turkey and Sunni Arabs of Iraq to stay in power for good. And again under the leadership of Israel Qubad Talabani and his mother allied with Iran and Shi’a of Iraq to stay in power for good. Many other players in South Kurdistan are allied with Turkey and Iran, but they are not making any progress because Turkey and Iran were only dealing with Barzani and Talabani families. One of the Talabani’s men by the name of Nawshirwan Mustafa come up with the idea of change to defeat Talabani and Barzani with the help of Iraqi Shi’a Government but failed. Nawshirwan Mustafa was trying to use PKK forces against Barzani and Talabani but failed too, because PKK leadership knows them very well.

It is evident for educated Kurds in South Kurdistan that only PKK forces can liberate Kurds from Barzani and Talabani families. But PKK does not have time now; they are in the middle of war in Turkey and Syria.

The US Government helped Barzani and Talabani to have significant military forces in that part of Iraq based on Israel recommendation. The new US administrations are very independent Government, oil lobbyist and Israel do not control over them anymore.

Iran is against the US interest in the Middle East, and the US knows very well that Barzani and Talabani’s forces are useless in the war. The US is seeking an alliance to be reliable in peace and wartime.

PKK are independent forces in the Middle East. They only depend on Kurdish people help, while they are seeking reliable partner too. The interest of PKK as the leader of the entire Kurdish population are sharing the common interest of the US interest in the Middle East, which could lead to the long-term alliance between PKK and the US against Iran expansion in that region.

Indeed, ‘The Return of the Medes” are in the process no one can stop that. Kurdish people are accepting Abdullah Ocalan philosophy finally; they are joining PKK ideologies by millions, while other political parties in Kurdistan are going down rapidly.

After 2539 years (Since Persian took over Median Empire) of abuses by Persian, Arabs, and Turks, the Kurds will be free to live in peace in Kurdistan, the land of the forefather of Kurds.

References

– The History of the Kurdish People: The Survival of the White & Aryan Kurds in Last 12,000 Years

-Barzani Kurds
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barzani_Kurds
-Mustafa Barzani
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mustafa_Barzani
-Turkey: Ankara Bargains With Iraqi Kurdistan’s President
Stratfor Think Tank Analysis FEBRUARY 27, 2017 | 21:36 GMT
https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/15a8493f35f78e55?projector=1
-The History of the Caucasian People: The Civilizations without Hatred and Racism

Hamma Mirwaisi, a senior Kurdish writer and author of the book, “Return of the Medes” and the forthcoming book, “Enemies with the Same DNA“. Born in Iraqi, Kurdistan, he is a US citizen; he currently resides in the United States; is an electrical engineer by trade; he spent the early years of his life participating in the struggle for the freedom of Kurd from the tyrannical rule of Saddam Hussein. Mirwaisi was a regular contributing writer for Ekurd.net between 2010-2013.

Source: http://ekurd.net/barzani-failed-policies-kurdistan-2017-03-01

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, family, kdp, Kurd, PKK

Is Iraqi Kurdistan heading toward civil war? urging Massoud Barzani to step down

January 4, 2017 By administrator

Thousands of people took to the streets of several towns in Iraq’s Kurdistan region on for the past weeks, urging its long-time president and KDP leader Massoud Barzani to step down and demanding payment of their salaries, Oct. 2015. Photo: AFP

Dr. Denise Natali | Al-Monitor

The campaign against the Islamic State (IS) in Mosul has diverted attention from simmering problems inside the Kurdistan Region of Iraq that will affect post-conflict stabilization. Within the last several months alone, there has been another assassination of a Kurdish journalist, an “honor” killing of a university student, death threats against a female Kurdish parliamentarian, bombing of an Iranian Kurdish party office that killed seven people and a string of foiled terrorist attacks in Sulaimaniyah province. These incidents have occurred alongside ongoing demonstrations by civil servants for unpaid salaries, a nonfunctioning Kurdish parliament, swelling numbers of refugees and internally displaced persons, an expanded Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and Turkish airstrikes on PKK bases in northern Iraq. They have not only reversed most gains the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) has realized since 2011, but also leave the Kurdistan Region increasingly vulnerable to financial collapse and internal conflict.

Instead of “inevitable Kurdish statehood” after the defeat of IS, a more realistic scenario is weakened autonomy, political entropy and armed conflicts. The KRG launched “independent” exports in 2014, but the Kurdish economy is now in tatters. KRG debt exceeds $22 billion. The availability of electricity has decreased to 2005 levels, or about four hours a day in many areas without private generators. Tens of thousands of youths continue to migrate from the region. The once-touted Kurdish energy sector is being undermined legally and politically. Although the KRG exports about 600,000 barrels of oil per day to Ceyhan, these exports remain contentious, are dependent on Turkey and are largely sourced from Kirkuk — still a disputed territory — and not the Kurdistan Region. International oil companies have thus far abandoned 19 oil fields in the Kurdistan Region, including ExxonMobil’s withdrawal from three of its six fields.

Emails between the KRG Ministry of Natural Resources and Turkish officials released by WikiLeaks reveal the depth of the KRG’s financial crisis and the political fallout. In the eyes of some Kurds, the ministry’s attempt to secure an additional $5 billion in loans from Ankara and offer Turkey a larger stake in Kurdish-controlled oil fields may help protect the economic interests of the Kurdistan Region. Others, however, including parliamentarians in Erbil, see things differently and oppose the ministry’s proposal as the “selling of the Kurdish land to Turkey.” Iraqi officials in Baghdad have also reacted critically, arguing that the KRG does not have the legal right to sell oil fields to Turkey.

Expanded PKK influence in northern Iraq is feeding off these crises and reinforcing intra-Kurdish power struggles. In addition to its base in the Qandil Mountains, PKK groups are now embedded in the Sinjar Mountains to protect the Yazidis against future incursions by IS and to control this strategic territory. While the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and Gorran support or tolerate the PKK, Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) officials have threatened to potentially use force to eject the PKK from Sinjar. Ankara has also warned that it will intervene in Sinjar in the spring if the peshmerga fail to drive out the PKK. Although acting PKK leader Murat Karayilan has recently said that PKK forces are prepared to withdraw from the Yazidi district of Sinjar, it is unlikely that PKK-affiliated groups will depart entirely. Divisions between those that support the KDP and those against it in northern Iraq are also palpable. Concerns have emerged about the possibility of another birakuji, Kurdish civil war.

Indeed, the idea of armed conflict between the Kurds or internal instability may be difficult to imagine. Much has improved since their four-year Kurdish civil war (1994-98). The Kurdistan Region has developed economically, matured politically, gained international recognition as part of a federal Iraqi state and has become a key local partner in the battle against IS. Although the Kurdish parties are bickering, the risks of sustained violence are too high for leading KRG officials, who are deeply vested financially in the region. Iraqi Kurdish parties are also too fractured and reliant on President Massoud Barzani to effectively challenge the KDP, even if they oppose it politically.

Still, part of the current crises is beyond the KRG’s control and is not so different from what led to the Kurdish civil war. At that time, Iraqi Kurdistan was politically and economically unstable, despite its international safe haven status. Baghdad’s withdrawal from the Kurdish north after the 1990 Gulf War and international sanctions against Iraq had left the newly created KRG unable to pay civil servant salaries, provide services, resettle hundreds of thousands of Kurdish refugees and reconstruct the villages destroyed by President Saddam Hussein’s Anfal campaign, which involved chemical attacks. Although individual traders tied to Kurdish political parties found creative ways to break sanctions and profit, the majority of Kurds were poor and reliant on international aid.

Power struggles were also salient between the KDP and PUK over leadership and access to revenues and resources. These tensions drew in Turkey, Iran and rival Kurdish parties, including the PKK, much like what has happened today. Back then, for instance, to check the PKK insurgency raging in southeastern Turkey and to secure smuggling revenue at the Habur border, the KDP negotiated commercial and security arrangements with Turkey. Ankara, in turn, launched a series of cross-border military campaigns from 1992 to 1997 — Operation Steel-1 and Operation Hammer — to pursue the PKK across the border. At one point, Turkish interventions involved 35,000 troops penetrating 37 miles inside the Kurdistan Region. The PUK gained support from Iran and backed the PKK. Islamic groups also took advantage of the instability to form and radicalize, including the precursors to Ansar al-Islam.

These patterns are repeating themselves in the Kurdistan Region. Even if the KRG and Kurdish party officials have much to lose from internal conflict, other groups may not and could benefit from the weak Iraqi state, angry populations and managed instability. In addition, as the KRG becomes increasingly dependent on Ankara, the Kurdish problem in Turkey remains unresolved, the Kurds in Syria demand autonomy and the PKK expands its influence, the KRG will inherit the transborder PKK problem. The PKK in turn will attempt to benefit from the political void growing in the Iraqi Kurdish street, where many see it as an authentic Kurdish nationalist party. The PKK and other radicalized groups are also useful to regional states, including Iran, that seek to counter Barzani-KDP power and Turkey.

Left unchecked, these tensions will continue to undermine the economic growth and internal stability of the Kurdistan Region — even after Mosul’s liberation — and the KRG’s ability to act as an effective local partner to defeat IS. More serious attention should be paid to strengthening Iraqi state institutions, including the KRG and provincial administrations, economic diversification, revenue-sharing between Baghdad and Erbil, border security and relations between Ankara, Baghdad and the KRG. The PKK issue inside northern Iraq also needs to be addressed by including ways to reinstate a cease-fire with Ankara and resolve the Kurdish issues in Turkey and Syria.

Dr. Denise Natali is a senior research fellow at the Institute for National Strategic Studies (INSS), National Defense University, where she specializes in regional energy politics, Middle East politics, and the Kurdish issue.

1st published at al-monitor.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, civil, Iraqi, Kurdistan, war

PKK accuses Barzani’s KDP of preventing Yazidis from returning to Sinjar

December 23, 2016 By administrator

Erbil, Iraq’s Kurdistan region,— The political wing of Kurdistan Workers’ Party PKK, the Group of Communities in Kurdistan KCK, accused the Massoud Barzani-led Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) of preventing Yazidis from returning to their homes in Sinjar (Shingal) in northwest Iraq.

The KCK Foreign Relations Committee in a statement on Tuesday responded to Iraq’s Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani, who earlier said the PKK was preventing Yazidis from returning to Sinjar.

The committee denied Sinjar Resistance Units (YBS) had prevented aid from coming into Sinjar and denied the statements made by the KRG premier.

“YBS fighters have never prevented aid into Sinjar. It is the KDP which prevented aid into Sinjar by the closure of the Semalka border gate where assistance was transferred to Sinjar,” the statement said.

“The duty of both the KDP and the PKK and of all other Kurdish political forces is to achieve Yazidis self-government and self-defense there,” the statement added.

During the Conference of the Future Independence of Kurdistan, Challenges and Opportunities, held at the American University of Kurdistan in Duhok, KRG premier Nechirvan Barzani said the PKK has complicated the situation in Sinjar by settling in.

“A reason that displaced people won’t return to Sinjar, and that the town remains un-constructed, is the PKK. These people are not certain of their lives, the PKK must understand that,” he said.

Islamic State group has captured most parts of the Yazidi Sinjar district in northwest Iraq on August 3, 2014 which led thousands of Kurdish families to flee to Mount Sinjar, where they were trapped in it and suffered from significant lack of water and food, killing and abduction of thousands of Yazidis as well as rape and captivity of thousands of women.

Those who stay behind are subjected to brutal, genocidal acts: thousands killed, hundreds buried alive, and countless acts of rape, kidnapping and enslavement are perpetuated against Yazidi women. To add insult to injury, IS fighters ransack and destroy ancient Yazidi holy sites.

According to Human Rights organizations, thousands of Yazidi Kurdish women and girls have been forced to marry or been sold into sexual slavery by the IS jihadists.

A Yazidi member of Iraqi parliament Vian Dakhil, said in August that 3,770 Kurdish Yazidi women and children still in Islamic State captivity.

Kurdish forces including PKK, backed by Coalition warplanes, declared victory over Islamic State (IS) in Sinjar on Nov. 13, 2015 after more than a year of fighting over the mainly-Yazidi district.

Source: Ekurd.net

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, PKK, Yazidis

Kurdistan Reportedly Sells 910,000 Bpd For $1B Every Month “Where Barzani stashing the Billions?”

November 3, 2016 By administrator

barzani-and-billions-oilBy Tsvetana Paraskova

The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in northern Iraq is selling 910,000 bpd and reaping nearly US$1 billion in oil revenues every month, an investigative reporting piece by the Kurdistan region’s news outlet NRT showed on Wednesday. If the figures are correct, Iraq as a whole is pumping much more than the central government, the Kurdistan government, and OPEC sources have been estimating.

According to a foreign source with knowledge of Kurdistan’s oil, NRT has estimated that the fields in the Kurdistan Region and in Kirkuk under the control of the KRG Ministry of Natural Resources are producing as follows: Khurmala oil field – 210,000 bpd, Tawke oil field – 190,000 bpd, Taq Taq oil field – 110,000 bpd, Havana and Bai Hassan oil field – 300,000 bpd, and other small oil fields – 100,000 bpd. That’s a total of 910,000 bpd, or 27,300,000 barrels every month. If oil is sold at US$36 as the KRG has indicated, this means almost US$1 billion in revenue.

NRT’s investigation has revealed that except for some foreign companies and “officials from the Kurdistan Region, including Masoud Barzani, the KRG Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani and the KRG Minister of Natural Resources, Ashti Hawrami, no other individual or party is aware of the revenue”.

According to figures by the autonomous province’s Ministry of Natural Resources, the KRG received US$328 million from crude oil exports in September. For the whole month of September, the KRG shipped a total of 16.94 million barrels of crude, according to the ministry.

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Iraq – which has questioned the way OPEC calculates output from secondary sources since day one after the cartel agreed to work toward an agreement to limit production – released a few days ago detailed data about the crude oil output at each of its 26 oilfields as well as equally detailed export figures, in an attempt to prove that OPEC’s external-source output estimates do not reflect reality.

The data also included a total output figure from fields in Kurdistan. According to these figures, Iraq pumped 4.7 million bpd in September.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

Filed Under: News Tagged With: 25 governors replaced across Turkey, Barzani, Billions, Iraq, oil, Turkey

Barzani-affiliated forces fighting with Turkey against Syrian Kurds: PYD

August 31, 2016 By administrator

barzani-working-turks

Gharib Hasu, a leader from the Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party PYD. Photo: PYD

KOBANI, Syrian Kurdistan,— The representative of Syrian pro-Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) in Syrian Kurdistan (northern Syria) stated that Peshmerga forces affiliated with the Iraqi Kurdistan’s Massoud Barzani are fighting against the PYD’s military wing, the Kurdish YPG forces in Jerablus, northern Syria.

Gharib Hasu told Kurdpress that Barzani-led Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) has a close relation with Turkey ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) in order to fight against Kurdish struggle in Syria.

He went on to add that Barzani and Syria’s Kurdish National Council KNC (ENKS) have sent a group of Peshmerga fighters to Rojava (the way Kurds call their regions in northern Syria).

ENKS, an affiliate of Massoud Barzani and also backed by Turkish government, is a coalition of 12 small Syrian Kurdish parties and known to have developed an oppositional stance against PYD as the group became more dominant in Syrian Kurdistan over time.

The forces are in the ranks of Free Syria Army and are fighting against the PYD, but their language is Kurdish, adding that if the issue is confirmed it would be a great treason against Syrian Kurds, he added.

Turkey launched an unprecedented cross-border offensive into Syria, dubbed “Euphrates Shield,” last week, saying it was aimed at ridding the frontier of both Islamic State group jihadists and Kurdish militia to prevent U.S.-backed Kurdish YPG fighters from seizing more territory along the Turkish border.

While the PYD has accused the KNC of working for foreign agendas and Turkey, the KNC has accused the PYD of working with the Syrian regime.

Barzani’s KDP which opposite the ruling PYD party doesn’t recognize the autonomous Kurdish government in Syrian Kurdistan. Political experts say Massoud Barzani, sees Syrian Kurdistan as potential political competition.

the PYD has accused the KDP [which leads Iraqi Kurdistan] of imposing an embargo on Syria’s Kurdish region [Rojava] by closing its borders on behalf of Turkey.

Turkey wants to stop Kurdish forces taking control of territory that lies between autonomous cantons of Syrian Kurdistan to the east and west that they already hold, and so creating an unbroken Kurdish- controlled corridor on Turkey’s southern border.

Syrian Kurds have established three autonomous zones, or Cantons of Jazeera, Kobani and Afrin and a Kurdish government across Syrian Kurdistan (northern Syria) in 2013.  On March 17, 2016 Syria’s Kurds declared a federal region in Syrian Kurdistan.

Source: http://ekurd.net/barzani-affiliated-forces-syria-2016-08-31

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: against. pyd kurd, Barzani

Turkey’s AKP provided Massoud Barzani with $200 million: Wikileaks

July 22, 2016 By administrator

akp-barzani-wilileaksHEWLÊR-Erbil, Kurdistan region ‘Iraq’,— The website WikiLeaks released on Tuesday nearly 300,000 emails allegedly sent from Turkey’s ruling AK Party (AKP), some of which were related to Iraq’s Kurdistan Region, four days after a failed military coup in Turkey.

One of the emails posted on the WikiLeaks website, dating back to March 15, 2016, purports to show evidence that the AKP gave Masoud Barzani $200 million in financial aid. The Kurdistan Regional Government is not mentioned in the email and the Kurdistan Region is referred to as “areas under the control of Peshmerga.”

According to the email, the AKP provided Barzani with the sum due to the temporary halt of Iraqi Kurdistan’s oil flow following the re-activation of the Kirkuk-Yumurtalik oil pipeline, which was stalled for 24 days.

he KRG called on Ankara for financial assistance as it struggles to pay the salary of Peshmerga forces due to financial crisis according to information in the email posted on WikiLeaks.

The date of the email coincides with a statement by KRG Spokesman Safeen Dizayee, which confirmed to NRT the KRG owed the Turkish government $200 million. The email claims to reveal the money was provided by the AKP according to a deal which does not mention the KRG or Turkey. There was no report from the KRG’s Ministry of Natural Resources regarding the sum of money.

Oil exports to Turkey via the Kirkuk- Yumurtalık oil pipeline resumed on March 11, after being stalled for 24 days due to act of sabotage near the city of Urfa in Turkey’s southeast.

KRG officials made statement regarding the stoppage of oil flow, some of whom said the pipeline was damaged in an explosion, but investigation did not find evidence of an explosion.

Last February Kurdistan MP and Finance and Economic Affairs Committee Deputy Ali Hama Salih has criticized the KRG for “misleading” the public in Kurdistan and giving “contradictory speeches” regarding the cessation of the region’s oil exports.

“The KRG is deceiving the public,” he said. They have recently reported there was an explosion on the oil pipeline while yesterday the KRG spokesman said bombs have been placed surrounding the pipeline. On the other hand, the Ministry of Natural Resources says the pipeline is old and will be reconstructed,” Salih added.

Hours after Wikileaks released thousands of the ruling AK Party emails, Turkey blocked access to WikiLeaks website.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: 200 millions, AKP, Barzani, Turkey, WikiLeaks

Barzani pressures Êzidîs to fight against the PKK, Êzidîs ‘WE WILL NOT FIGHT THE PKK, WHO PROTECTED US AGAINST ISIS’

May 14, 2016 By administrator

Ezidi will not fight PKKMasoud Barzani pressured Êzidîs to fight against the PKK. Êzidîs peshmergas and mukhtars criticized this pressure and stated that they would not fight against a force that saved them from a massacre.

DUHOK – ANF,

Masoud Barzani met with 300 Êzidî peshmergas and mukhtars in the Sıhêle military base in Duhok yesterday, and pressured them to fight against the PKK.

A peshmerga, who wishes to remain anonymous due to security concerns, that participated in the meeting spoke to ANF and said that Barzani pressured peshmergas and mukhtars to fight against the PKK but was met with a harsh reaction.

‘FIGHT AGAINST THE PKK IF NEEDED’

In the meeting, Masoud Barzani stated that the PKK’s existence in Shengal should be ended and asked Êzidî peshmergas and people to take a stance against the PKK openly. Accordingly, Barzani said that the existence of two authorities in Shengal should be ended, and the Êzidî peshmergas and people should take an open stance against the PKK and kick it out of Shengal. Barzani also said that they would fight the PKK if it refuses to leave the city.

‘WE WILL NOT FIGHT THE PKK, WHO PROTECTED US AGAINST ISIS’

The peshmerga that spoke to ANF said that several people objected to Barzani’s pressure to fight against the PKK, saying that the PKK prevented ISIS from massacring Êzidîs and has received a lot of love and devotion from the Êzidîs, who would not fight the PKK under any circumstances.

Reportedly, Barzani could not convince the Êzidîs, who warned Barzani that fighting against the PKK would harm the national union of Kurdish people.

‘NATIONAL UNITY WOULD BE HARMED’

Lastly, the peshmerga that participated in the meeting praised the PKK for contributing to the national union of Kurdish people through its struggle and sacrifice, and emphasized that Êzidî peshmergas would never join a war that would target the PKK and harm the national unity of Kurdish people.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, Êzidîs, fight, ISIS, PKK, PROTECTED, US AGAINST

Barzani’s KDP intends to prosecute Gorran leader Nawshirwan Mustafa: MP

January 6, 2016 By administrator

KDP leader Massoud Barzani (L) with Gorran leader Nawshirwan mustafa 2014. Photo: U.S. Department of State

KDP leader Massoud Barzani (L) with Gorran leader Nawshirwan mustafa 2014. Photo: U.S. Department of State

HEWLÊR-Erbil, Kurdistan region ‘Iraq’,— The Kurdistan Democratic Party KDP, led by Massoud Barzani plans to prosecute the leader of Change (Gorran) Movement Nawshirwan Mustafa..

Member of the KDP Shêrzad Qasim told the National Iraqi News Agency that “the Party prepared a complete file to prosecute Nawshirwan Mustafa in charges of influencing at the public security in the Kurdistan region and inciting violence and planning to target the KDP headquarters of some of the diplomatic corps in Erbil.”

He added that the file will be submitted to the judiciary soon including a video tape in which Nawshirwan Mustafa appears in a meeting with the leaders of Gorran which calls frankly to disturb the public security in the Kurdistan region.

According to Gorran, Nawshirwan Mustafa who is in Europe for medical treatment since last September will spend a number of months abroad for treatment on his back. Omer Sayd Ali has been appointed to fulfil the duties of general coordinator of Gorran until Mustafa returns, local media reported.

The crisis erupted after Massoud Barzani, whose term as Kurdistan President ended on August 20, 2015 but refused to step down and remains unofficially in office.

A 2013 law stipulated that Barzani’s term cannot be extended again, and the other parties have objected to his determination to stay put. But KDP leaders claim the president can be replaced only via elections.

Kurdistan Parliament Speaker stated that the law in the region does not allow extending the term of Massoud Barzani. Yusuf Mohammad Sadiq told al-Hura TV channel that the region has its own law on the presidency and it does not allow any person to run for more than two times.

Massoud Barzani has led Kurdistan region as president from 2005 for two executive terms and his last term was extended in 2013 by ruling KDP and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) for two more years on the condition that he can no longer run as president.

The five main Kurdish parties, the KDP, PUK, Gorran Movement, Kurdistan Islamic Union (KIU) and Kurdistan Islamic Group (KIG) held the 9th rounds of negotiations at the Grand Millennium Hotel in Sulaimani on October 9, 2015, but failed, because KDP members insist that Massoud Barzani should remain president of the region.

Residents in the Kurdistan Region’s eastern cities and towns have been protesting against overdue salary payments and have called on political parties to solve a weeks-long crisis on the region’s presidency.

Thousands of people demonstrated in October 2015 against KRG and KDP in Sulaimani city and several other Kurdish towns, demanding payment of their salaries from KRG and that KDP leader Massoud Barzan to step down.

Several local KDP headquarter buildings were set on fire by the protesters.

Barzani has been accused by critics of amassing huge wealth for his family instead of serving the population. Barzani’s son is the Kurdistan region’s intelligence chief and his nephew Nechirvan Barzani is the prime minister.

The KDP blames Gorran for inciting demonstrators to attack KDP offices in Sulaimani and Halabja provinces in September 2015. Gorran denied the accusations.

Kurdistan PM Nechirvan Barzani has removed four members of his cabinet from the Change (Gorran) Movement on October 13, 2015 in an escalating political crisis that threatens to destabilize the relatively peaceful region. Iraqi Kurdistan Parliament’s Speaker was prevented from entering Erbil city on October 11, 2015.

The expelled ministers were replaced on October 28, 2015 with KDP politicians.

The Gorran Movement accused the KDP of a monopoly all government’s positions in Erbil, and it does not believe in the principles of true partnership and and peaceful transfer of power.

Source: eKurd

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, prosecute Gorran

Barzani siding with Turkey is turning Kurds fight among themselves in Iraq

December 17, 2015 By administrator

Barzani kurd a partWhile Erdogan busy slaughtering Kurd in Turkey he also turning the Kurds in Iraq against each other

Mrs. Talabany, has warned Mr. Barzani not to support Turkey in any shape or way and she is against any agreement with the Turkish government. She is advocating that the Kurds must turn to Baghdad and not Turkey when trying to solve all internal problems.

Gorran party, and other Islamic parties, are pushing to form a new military wing to counter the KDP influence and to “protect” themselves from any harm, or physical threat, that will come from the KDP. Isn’t all that great!? So much hate and disagreement among those so called “leaders” that are vying for position, influence and power to satisfy their power needs.

War in making like 1990s when the KDP and the PUK fought a deadly battle that lasted for years. He seemed very pessimistic and worried that indeed the day of conflict between these parties will be ignited once more.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, Iraq, Kurd

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