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GERMANY Berlin demand in Kurdistan to better control the weapons he has delivered to him

January 23, 2016 By administrator

PashmargaThe German Foreign Ministry on Friday urged the government of the autonomous region of Kurdistan to ensure that weapons supplied by Germany go well with Kurdish fighters against Islamic State Group (EI).

The regional public broadcasters WDR and NDR reported that stamped Bundeswehr weapons, such as G3 assault rifles and pistols, were on sale in markets in northern Iraq. According to the Süddeutsche Zeitung, these weapons could in particular have been sold by former peshmerga fighters who have well funded “their flight to Europe.” “We have requested the representative of the regional government (Iraqi Kurdistan) to come to the Foreign Ministry,” said Martin Schäfer, spokesman of the Ministry, told a regular government news conference. “We expect that the government of Kurdistan and the leaders among the Peshmerga work immediately and consistently about these accusations,” he has said, adding, “such practices if they are confirmed must cease immediately and totally.”

After a long and heated debate, Germany had finally decided in August 2014 to militarily equip Kurdish fighters so they can defend themselves against EI.

Saturday, January 23, 2016,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Germany, Kurdistan, weapon

Kurdish authorities seize $250 mln belonging to Kurdistan oil minister’s wife: report

January 20, 2016 By administrator

Iraqi Kurdistan oil minister Ashti Hawrami’s wife Chra (Chrakhan) Rafiq. Photo: Rudaw

Iraqi Kurdistan oil minister Ashti Hawrami’s wife Chra (Chrakhan) Rafiq. Photo: Rudaw

HEWLÊR-Erbil, Kurdistan region ‘Iraq’,— Kurdish authorities reportedly have seized some $250 million belonging to an oil “businesswoman” and wife of Iraqi Kurdistan Region’s current minister of Natural Resources Ashti Hawrami, the Wusha newspaper reported Wednesday.

The Wusha report stated the Kurdistan Presidency formed an investigative committee to look into the dealings of Chra Rafiq, wife of Minister Ashti Hawrami, and that the money is now in a bank in the Kurdistan Region.

The unknown businesswomen Rafiq, a dual Iraqi and German citizen, has not been officially accused of having committed any crime although she reportedly left the Kurdistan Region for Turkey upon the announcement of an impending investigation.

Wusha also reported that “some officials” attempted to intervene in the matter but that the investigative committee blocked their efforts.

NRT reached out to Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) members Dilshad Shaaban and Salih Bashar from the Parliament’s Committee on Energy and Natural Resources for confirmation of the seizure. Both did not answer repeated calls.

In a post to his Facebook page, Change Movement (Gorran) MP and energy committee member Ali Hama Salih said he hoped for similar investigations in the future to fight corruption in the region.

Kurdistan oil minister Ashti Hawrami routinely accused of corruption by observers, Kurdish officials and local media.

Many Kurdish politicians and Observers believe that many of the oil industry projects in Iraqi Kurdistan are conducted in a non-transparent way. Some have even described them as secretive.

Read more about Corruption in Iraqi Kurdistan

Source: eKurd

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Kurdistan, oil minister, wife

Barzani the de facto Governor of Erdogan requests Russia avoid Kurdish airspace for Syria missions

December 7, 2015 By administrator

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region — Kareem Sinjari, the interior minister of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), met with Russian Consul General to Erbil Victor Simakov on Monday to hold talks regarding Kurdistan suspending flights at the Erbil and Sulaimani airports as Russian jets fly over the region on missions to Syria.

Sinjari reportedly asked Simakov to request Moscow find an alternate route for its aircraft and cruise missiles that avoids using the Kurdistan region’s airspace.

Simakov promised to discuss the matter with the Russian government and said that currently there is no other way for Moscow to avoid Kurdish airspace.

Additionally, Simakov told Rudaw that during the meeting the KRG interior minister was informed of the arrival of Russian military aid to Kurdish Peshmerga forces, including light weapons.

In terms of supporting Kurdish Peshmerga forces in the fight against the self-claimed Islamic State, several countries have delivered military assistance to the Kurdistan region, but this is the first time Russia has done so.

On Sunday the Baghdad central government asked that Kurdistan suspend flights at its two airports for 48 hours because Russia is targeting ISIS just across the border in Syria.

This is the second time in less than a month that Kurdistan has suspended all fights at Baghdad’s request due to Russian military action.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Air-space, Iraqi, Kurdistan, Russia

Anti-Barzani’s KDP protests turn violent in Iraqi Kurdistan, two killed, 17 injured

October 10, 2015 By administrator

450x360xKDP-branch-in-Qala-Dize-set-on-fire-Iraqi-Kurdistan-oct-92015-photo-nrt.jpg.pagespeed.ic.A4yaddtu2iERBIL-Hewler, Kurdistan region ‘Iraq’,— Two protesters are dead and at least 17 others injured after protests in the Kurdish town of Qaladze in Iraqi Kurdistan region turned violent Friday.

Demonstrators gathered outside the mayor’s office in Qaladze, 100 km east of Kurdistan capital city of Erbil, during the afternoon and called on the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) to pay employees’ salaries and bring an end to the ongoing presidency and economic crises.

Friday’s demonstration turned violent when protesters changed their planned course and headed towards the headquarters of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) in Qaladize throwing stones, officials said.

KDP guards shot into the crowd, killing two and injuring 17 others. Four security forces were also reportedly injured in clashes, NRT reported.

Angry demonstrators then attacked the building, setting it on fire.

“The firing came from the KDP,” said Hawsar Wshyar Mohammed Amin, a member of the Sulaimani provincial council from former opposition party Gorran.

But Hamid Qaladizei, a member of the KDP branch in the city, denied the bullets had been fired from there, and said it was not to blame for the man’s death.

“We acted very responsibly,” Qaladizei said. “There are people behind these protesters who are provoking them. The number of police is insufficient to protect us and control the situation.”

The KDP, Gorran and three of the region’s other parties have been wrangling over the terms of an extension for Massoud Barzani’s presidency since it expired on Aug. 20.

The stalemate has polarized Kurdish politics and compounded an economic crisis that began in early 2014 when Baghdad slashed funds to the region. A drop in oil prices that has pushed the region to the verge of bankruptcy.

KDP offices in the nearby towns of Zharawa, Hajiawa and Sangasar were also attacked late Friday, with the protesters setting the Zharawa building on fire.

Security forces moved into the area following the demonstrations to maintain order.

The Kurdistan Region’s three major cities – Erbil, Duhok and Sulaimani – are on high security alert as protests spread across the northern provinces and tensions remain high.

Security forces have set up a perimeter around the Change Movement (Gorran) party offices in Duhok and Erbil to prevent retaliatory attacks by KDP supporters.

Iraqi Kurdistan Region’s political parties suspended their ninth meeting on the presidency issue Thursday after failing to reach a final agreement.

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.

Iraqi Kurdistan parliament speaker, Yousif Mohammed Sadiq said last August “Extending Barzani term is against the laws in Kurdistan. Law No. 19 passed in 2013 … clearly says the president’s term ends on Aug. 19 and cannot be extended,” Sadiq added.

KDP leader Masoud Barzani urged the Kurdistan Region’s security forces and government agencies to address growing unrest in the region.

The last serious bout of unrest in the region was in 2011, when Kurds protested against corruption and nepotism, inspired by popular uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa.

Source: eKurd

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Anti-Barzani’s KDP, Kurdistan, protests, violent

Is Iraqi Kurdistan splitting apart … again? Putting all of the KRG’s eggs in one Turkish basket,

September 28, 2015 By administrator

A picture taken on July 3, 2014 shows the building of Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan region's parliament in Arbil, Kurdistan's capital in northern Iraq. The president of Kurdistan, Massud Barzani asked its parliament to start organising a referendum on independence.   AFP PHOTO / SAFIN HAMED        (Photo credit should read SAFIN HAMED/AFP/Getty Images)

A picture taken on July 3, 2014 shows the building of Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region’s parliament in Arbil,  SAFIN HAMED/AFP/Getty Images)

By Denise Natali,

On a recent episode of the popular Iraqi Kurdish talk show “With Ranj” produced in Sulaimaniyah, the four participants — all members of diverse political parties — debated the Kurdistan Region’s political and financial crises. The discussion was most notable for its tone and substance. Instead of talking about the need for an independent Kurdistan, a topic that has preoccupied mainstream media and analysts inside the Beltway, it focused on just the opposite: political and economic trends that are chipping away at the region’s autonomy and stability. These concerns are resonating throughout the Kurdistan Region, where local populations are criticizing the Kurdistan Regional Government’s opaque oil exports, endemic corruption and failure to pay civil servant salaries, and questioning the legitimacy of Massoud Barzani’s presidency. They are further deepening political and geographic divides that if left unchecked could split the region administratively and/or create civil unrest.

Iraqi Kurdistan’s current tensions reflect the legacies of the Kurdish civil war (1994-98), which divided the region into “yellow” and “green” zones representing the territorial influence of the Democratic Party of Kurdistan (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), respectively. After the war ended, the two parties ran their own administrations in Erbil and Sulaimaniyah for eight years until they “re-unified” in 2006 in the effort to enhance Kurdish leverage in a federal Iraqi state. The merge created a single KRG in Erbil and a Kurdish block in Baghdad, but it never resolved internal disputes over authority, revenues and resources.

As the balance of power shifted in the region, Kurdish power struggles have resurfaced. The two main Kurdish parties are now making distinct claims on resources as a means of affirming provincial leverage. Competitions for access to Kirkuk’s oil have also emerged, not only between the KDP and PUK, but also with other claimants such as Iraqi populations and Baghdad and Kirkuk officials. Even then, the KRG’s current crisis extends beyond traditional party rivalries over revenues and resources. It represents a popular movement driven by a combination of opposition groups, independents and parties in the Kurdish government that are all demanding greater decentralization, financial transparency, democratic institutions and the rule of law. The movement has gained traction in the presidency crisis, creating a clear division between those who regard Barzani’s authority as legitimate and those who do not, particularly since his term expired on Aug. 19.

The region’s ongoing financial crisis is reinforcing these political divides. Whereas most local populations initially blamed Baghdad for cutting the KRG budget last year, many now fault leading KRG officials. One Kurdish resident in Erbil argued that by “placing all of the KRG’s eggs in the Turkish basket, the KRG has not only undermined necessary relations with Baghdad, but has left the region dependent on Turkey and more financially vulnerable than ever before.” Fueling these claims is the opaque Kurdish oil sector. Officials on the oil and gas committee in the Iraqi Kurdistan parliament affirm that “no one knows where the KRG’s oil revenues are actually going.” Although the KRG has about 16 bank accounts into which revenues from its oil sales are supposedly deposited, the KRG minister of finance has access to one Turkish Halkbank account — which has only $14 million in deposits — while the minister of natural resources and Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani control all other bank accounts.

Indeed, when it comes to existential threats to the Kurdistan Region, the Kurds remain generally united. They are committed to Kurdish identity, territory and resources. They proudly identify with their peshmerga forces, who are courageously defending Kurdish borders against the Islamic State. Most Kurds also are aware that Baghdad currently has little to offer and that the Kurdistan Region has to find an alternative means to financially sustain itself, at least for the time being.

Still, political divisions are being encouraged in the hyper-fragmented Iraqi state and fight against IS as local groups seek to gain power, resources and recognition. The result has been an inadvertent enhancing of Barzani’s power through coalition military support, stronger reactions by those seeking political reform and deepening distrust between groups. Since the presidency crisis commenced, the KDP has added three checkpoints along the road from Sulaimaniyah to Erbil. It also prevented some officials from the Gorran movement, a former opposition group now in the parliament, from entering Erbil a few weeks ago. These trends have strengthened the role of political hard-liners who are unwilling to compromise. Despite numerous meetings between the four Kurdish political parties and the KRG — otherwise known as the P4+1 — to resolve the presidency crisis, no full solution is in sight. Many argue that the issue could continue until the next election in 2017, which, according to one Kurdish official, will be “neck-breaking.”

At the moment, a formal split between regions or a mass mobilization is unlikely, given the war against IS, deep party patronage networks and no clear alternative offered by opposition groups. Yet, as the financial crisis deepens, corruption continues, political legitimacy is ignored and calls for decentralization go unheeded, the KRG may have an administrative breakup, even in de-facto form. At worst, these issues will continue to fester through open and silent resistance that may further stifle the stability and economic development of the Kurdistan Region.

Source: Al monitor

Denise Natali is a columnist for Al-Monitor. She is a senior research fellow at the Institute for National Strategic Studies (INSS), National Defense University where she specializes on regional energy politics, Middle East politics and the Kurdish issue. The views

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Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iraqi, Kurdistan, splitting

What favors dictatorship in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region?

September 16, 2015 By administrator

450x360xIraqi-Kurdistan-president-Massoud-Barzani-photo-afp.jpg.pagespeed.ic.xpJMKlzvt3Dr. Showan Khurshid | NRT

The crises we face today, in the Federal Region of Kurdistan, are not just because of ISIL’s attacks and financial shortages. We could have avoided them had it not been for the troubles at the foundations of our political system – one manifestation of which is the tension arising from the persisting demands that the current president, Mr. Massoud Barzani, stays in power, despite the fact that he served two initial terms, of four years each, and was given a two-year extension. This tension shows that Kurdish leaders or some of them have not adopted democracy as a peaceful means to organize the struggle for power. Obviously, Mr. Barzani’s interests are not limited to ruling just a few more years – had it been so, he might not have even bothered. The real aim is to stay in power as long as he can and then pass it on to his son. Barzani’s eldest son has already been groomed to wield power. As the head of national intelligence services, he has been playing important role in the ongoing undemocratic phase of the struggle for power. As such, it seems that we are in for a project for establishing a dictatorship or at least a dysfunctional democracy that leads us to eventual degeneration. Whether these less desired projects succeed or not are the topics of my discussion below. More precisely, in this part, I will point out those factors that favor building dictatorship. The second part will deal with those factors that make establishing dictatorship more difficult.

1. The Judiciary

Dictatorship can thrive in the absence of a powerful and independent judiciary. This is not to say that there are no brave judges who have defied the ruling elite in order to do justice. However, the fact that some of these judges are punished without much protest from their colleagues and the fact that many officials can escape prosecution even for grave transgressions reflect that the judiciary is not powerful and sufficiently independent.

2. Financial Auditory System

Lack of an effective auditory system allows phenomenal corruption, the proceeds of which are then used in recruiting or buying off dissenting voices and influential figures. Of course, we should expect such a situation when the auditors are bribed or not protected sufficiently.

3. The Weakness of the Parliament

We have to give credit to the current parliamentary leadership and several MPs for enhancing the position of Parliament and enabling it to play a more significant role in the drive for democracy, in comparison with previous terms. However, it is not powerful enough yet. For instance, it has not been able to set up inquiries into transgressions carried out continuously by influential figures in the ruling elite. Nor has it been able to pass all the laws the current situation requires. The limitation on the power of the Parliament is by design. The leaders of the parties, do not deign to take up seats in the Parliament, most likely to avoid being exposed in the public as inapt debaters and speakers, yet they want to have the final say to themselves.

4. Failing to adopt the principle of Neutrality of State

One of the reasons that establishing democracy is so difficult in the Islamic world, in general, is the mixing of religion and state. No doubt, the Islamic mentality is antipathetic toward the liberal freedoms, which are a precondition for democracy and involve freedom of conscience in choosing belief or disbelief, the right to express opinion even if it was against religions, and personal freedom, in regard to marriage and relationship between sexes. The majority of Islamists do not express openly their aversion to democracy. On the contrary, they even argue that Islam brought about the real democracy – despite the fact that in the whole of Islamic history no election has taken place.

So it seems there is a kind of “Islamic democracy,” even though they do not market it under this banner. The main feature of this democracy, ironically, is to impose a major condition that no law contradicting “unchanging principles [or the dogma] of Islam should pass.” This contradicts the essence of democracy, which is that people make the laws they choose; insofar these laws are in accordance with a respect of basic liberal rights.

In the current stable democracies, the state does not adopt any religion. In Muslim countries, the general assumption is that there is no need for such a separation, because, as it is believed, the separation was only necessary in the West, and that is because of the excess of Christianity, and that Islam is free from such shortcomings, naturally. That is why even the majority of supposedly secular political parties accept uncritically that demand of Islamists. So the problem is that people, and among them huge numbers of the educated, as well as politicians do not understand how religion undermines democracy and how that favors establishing a dictatorship.

(1) With such a condition accepted and featured in the constitutions of most Islamic countries, Islamic forces inside and outside legislative bodies can have strong bargaining positions through which they wring concessions, which usually aim at promoting the role of religion in the society and putting additional restrictions on secular intelligentsia. Some of the obvious consequence of this influence is that the state pays thousands of clergy and other employees of mosques. The state establishes religious schools and colleges. Islamic institutions have a free hand in building numerous mosques, set up dozens of religious TV and radio stations, publish books, and periodicals, teach and organize events. This means the whole population is constantly subjected to religious indoctrination. While in the meantime the state also disallows and prosecutes or does nothing in the way of protecting those who are critical of the religion. This is the reason that in many Islamic countries those who are suspected of atheism, blasphemy or secularism are either prosecuted by the state or left exposed to lethal attacks by Islamists.

(2) A part of the ideas directed at the population is concerned with discrediting liberal democracy under the pretext that the West allows atheism and promiscuity. This means that liberal democracy is not on demand across much of the Islamic world and with the absence of liberalism, democracy, no doubt, does not take off – obviously, there has not been a real and stable democracy without association with liberalism.

(3) This situation also engenders extremism. Simply put, with the masses of people exposed to religious teachings, a great many will try to receive his or her information from the original sources and the history of early Islam. But what they will find is encouragement of jihad, the need to establish an Islamic state with Sharia as the basis for its constitution.

As such, an antidemocratic mentality, the hallmark of extremists, will come automatically to people influenced this way. Extremists who follow the Western model of politics and lifestyle are counted as aggressors against Islam. With such ideas, it will be just a matter of time before someone or some groups decide that time for talk is up and action is needed and the target will be the secular individuals and later on, governmental institutions.

Yet, when this happens the ruling elites of the Islamic world are, shockingly, surprised that they have been dragged into bloody confrontation with Islamic forces, despite their feeling that they have done everything right in respecting and accommodating Islam – of course, unable to understand it is exactly this excessive accommodating of Islam that engenders extremism and terrorism in the first place.

This is not a wholly unwelcomed prospect for the ruling elite of the Islamic world though, because this situation gives them a unique opportunity to pose as if they are fighting extremism for which they demand or justify wielding greater power. The initial inference here is that mixing religion has given the ruling elite opportunity to assume and ask for greater power and as such has been facilitating for dictatorship.

(4) As importantly, Islamic indoctrination has affected the political and cultural education. People in the Islamic world do not read to educate themselves in politics, including their rights, the proper organization of states, the proper function of democracy, nor do they care about the basic sciences that underpin marvelous advances in technology and medicine. Obviously, the populations of the Islamic world are not in fertile ground for democracy. Such a population would very likely vote Islamist in an election as has happened many times over.

5. The lack of clear criteria for assessing the performance of the authority

Witnessing an election campaign in stable Western liberal democracies, one can note that the ideas used to win over voters revolve around certain basic themes: respect for individual rights; provision of quality social services, like municipal services, health, education; ensuring a prospering economy; maintaining or improving security at home and abroad. Judging the achievement of the KRG on the bases of these criteria will not yield any impressive scores. However, majority of the population can easily be taken in by nationalist rhetoric. The ruling elite takes good advantage of this. Thus in the eye of many, the president is a hero, just because he challenges the central authorities.

Recently, though, the image of the relentless hero of Kurdish nationalism has been undermined by the failure of forces led by officers loyal to him to defend Shingal and areas around Mosul, leaving hundreds of thousands of people to the barbarism of ISIL, and failing again to prosecute those officers responsible for the debacle.

The point here is that playing on nationalist sentiments usually allows a wide margin for rulers to escape the proper assessments that are necessary for establishing liberal democracy.

In the following article, I will write about the factors that make establishing dictatorship difficult in the Federal Region of Kurdistan.

6. The Strange Case of Political Party Culture of Iraqi-Kurdistan

Perhaps, the culture of political parties in Kurdistan is as serious threat to democracy as “Islamic democracy” itself. Here the party is not just an electioneering machine aimed at finding the winning ideas and disseminating them among people to win them over, as it is the case in stable democracies. Most Kurdish parties are also power and business enterprises. The two main political parties, the KDP and PUK, for instance – this may also apply to other parties though to lesser extent – own numerous business, banks, land, and properties. Moreover, these parties command their own militia as well as secret services – in fact, Kurdistan does not have its own army, the loyalties of various units of army are first and foremost are for the leadership of political parties, and there is a real fear that in the event of disagreement among the various leaderships, the Kurdish army will splinter with various units fighting each other. There are also hundreds, if not thousands of officials, of these parties who use the parties’ clout, including their armies and secret services to appropriate land and properties and procure business deals for themselves.

Accordingly, one should expect that the high-ranking officials must be recruiting the lower ranking ones through various kinds of deals. Still, these parties pay the salaries of thousands of employees who work within various professions, including teaching and administration. This means that the party, particularly KDP, acts as a state within state or a group within a larger one. The PUK, since the ailment of its leader, has been suffering some kind of disintegration and factionalizing. In that sense, the interests of the party and its leadership come ahead of the interests of the people of Kurdistan. This is an obvious reason why the KDP is so adamant on reinstalling Masoud Barzani even though doing so is clearly against the law on which KDP and Barzani himself agreed, and that extending his presidency will end the prospect of democracy perhaps for good.

Another negative effect of this party culture is demonstrated in the factionalizing of the state. Now, each of the major five parties – who all joined the government – has their feuding fiefdoms within the state administrations and departments. Sometimes, one can feel that even the prime minister conspires against one of his ministries, in order to undermine the popularity of the party holding the ministry. In effect, what we see in Kurdistan is a repetition of what has happened and is happening in Iraq, where each participating party in the government has its own fiefdom and the state is always kept underpowered and ineffective. This means that, eventually, Kurdistan might become like Iraq where even the posts are sold and the whole state is left vulnerable to the conquest of ISIL. This might mean that this factor will not facilitate dictatorship, but lead to having a failed state. Yet, this dysfunctionality of the state can also generate popular feeling that some kind of dictatorship is necessary to escape the unbearable situation.

Showan Khurshid is an author and lecturer of Politics at Salahaddin University. He holds a PhD in Political Theory from Cardiff University.

Source: eKurd

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: dictatorship, Iraqi, Kurdistan

Iraqi Kurdistan government account at Turkey’s Halkbank empty: official

September 8, 2015 By administrator

450x360xTurkish-Halkbank-photo-cyprus-mail-com.jpg.pagespeed.ic.xbn8ToFJdJERBIL-Hewler, Kurdistan region ‘Iraq’,— Iraqi Kurdistan Region’s finance minister has not transferred money from Turkish Halk Bank to Erbil after finding the government’s accounts empty, a Kurdish official said on Sunday.

Head of Parliament’s Finance Committee Izat Sabir told NRT that Minister Rebaz Mohammed Abdullah was in Turkey last week to conduct the transfer of funds earned from independent oil sales and meet with officials, including Halk Bank Director-General Ali Fuat.

The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Council of Ministers gave authority to the Ministry of Finance and Economic Affairs in June to transfer oil money from international banks back to the region.

Speaking on NRT’s Tawtwe program, Finance and Economic Affairs Committee Deputy Ali Hama Salih said the KRG account at Halk Bank has been empty for over four months.

“The finance minister just renewed the KRG account at Halk Bank in Turkey, and no oil money was in the account,” Salih said.

The region’s Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR) released its August report on Thursday, stating exports reached an average of 472,832 barrels per day (bpd) during the month.

Total exports for the month were listed at 14,657,798 barrels, of which 10,958,817 barrels came from fields operated by the KRG. Fields operated by the North Oil Company (NOC) supplied the remaining 3,698,981 barrels.

Independent oil sales continued in August, “to compensate the Region for the budget shortfalls from the federal government in Baghdad and to continue to pay down debts accumulated in 2014 from pre-payments for direct oil sales,” the MNR statement said.

MNR Minister Ashti Hawrami told NRT on August 24 the KRG began independently selling oil in June and that is had lost $500 million due to attacks inside Turkey on the Kurdistan-Ceyhan pipeline.

In 2013 and according to sources the KRG has backed down from using Turkey’s Halkbank as a mediator for transfers in a deal made for oil exports with Turkey.

Source: eKurd

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Bank, empty, Kurdistan, Turkey

Young Kurds flee Iraqi Kurdistan due to politics, not Islamic State, “Brain-Drain”

September 4, 2015 By administrator

By Sarkawt Shamsuldeen

Photo: AFP

Photo: AFP

WASHINGTON,— War and persecution are cited as the main reasons behind the flow of refugees, especially from countries such as Iraq and Syria. However, factors motivating young Kurdish people and families to risk their lives to reach European countries are not wars or persecutions by terrorist organizations. According to analysts, the Kurdistan Region of Iraq (KRI) is facing many challenges. But the threat of the Islamic State, or IS, is a minor one, at least for young people leaving the region for Europe.

Before the current crisis, Western media coverage of Kurdistan focused on economic prosperity and stable security.

– Iraq’s Kurdish Region Sees Economic Boom (VOA, 2012)
– Kurdistan: In the ‘other Dubai’, an economic boom (The Star, 2012)
– Iraqi Kurdistan’s economic revival (BBC, 2013)
– Kurdistan: the other Iraq (The Washington Post, 2011)

Apparently, the Kurdish honeymoon ended, 

The Western media were obsessed with fancy titles when referring to Iraqi Kurdistan, but these words are irrelevant these days. According to Kurdistan Parliament’s financial committee, the KRG’s debt ceiling reached $17 billion in 2014 and the region’s annual budget drastically decreased to $3 billion from $12 billion in 2013.

The threat of IS is still imminent to the region, but IS is not on the offensive along Kurdish borders. The Peshmerga have been successful in regaining control of most of the disputed and Kurdish-populated territories, except for Sinjar district. The region is now enjoying international support to enhance its military capacity. Unlike the Iraqi Army, Peshmerga have the trust of the Kurdish people as well as the West. However, reports show that thousands of Iraqi Kurds left to Europe in less than six months.

The Kurdish media have been reporting on the new flow of young Kurds who left the region over the past six months. I have personally received dozens of messages, phone calls, and emails from my fellow Kurds in Iraqi Kurdistan. These are mostly people I don’t know, but they know me or at least know where I live due to my job as NRT’s Washington Bureau Chief. They all seek my advice on how to get to the United States or how to get a U.S. visa. They also ask if there is any chance to get to Canada as rumors have convinced them that the Canadian Government welcomes refugees “easily.”

On September 2, I was on NRT’s Panorama show with two other colleagues, Barzan Hassan from Belgium and Sarhang Hars from London. Barzan was covering the plight of refugees in Belgium. He was surrounded by refugees who arrived in the country over several days. They were all from Iraqi Kurdistan. Barzan turned the mic to a few of them to express their views on why they chose to leave their country.

They appeared to be very tired and spoke with anger. “It was very easy to arrive here. It took me only 35 days, and it is very safe,” said one of the refugees talking to the NRT correspondent in Belgium. “I encourage everyone to leave Kurdistan because there is no life there, no basic services, no hope for a better life,” he added.

There was another individual who who was chanting for Europe in front of the camera. “Long live Europe, long live Europe!” he said. Barzan also talked about the severe situation in the camps, and that most of the refugees are not in good condition, but they still prefer to stay there and seek asylum.

After the show,

I spoke to Barzan about the reality on the ground. He told me that the people who left Kurdistan were very angry and ready to face death rather than stay in the region. He told me that none of these individuals mentioned IS as the main reason for leaving the country. “They all talk about the failure of the political system (e.g., the crisis of the Kurdistan Presidency), lack of basic services, unemployment, and a lack of anti-corruption efforts,” Barzan said. The difference in this new generation of Kurdistan’s immigrants to the West is that the majority of these people are educated and newly graduated youth. “They are not people who can’t work, but they all have either a degree and/or high skills and can compete in the new market. Some of them were former government employees,” Barzan concluded.

According to the informal statistics, 40% of Kurdish students who study in the United States have sought asylum or found other ways to stay in the country. I spoke to few of them via phone, Facebook and other means. These are students who are sponsored either by the government or their families to study in the U.S. They want to stay because they believe there is no “life” in that part of the world. “What am I going to do there? Government employees are not getting paid for three months; there is zero chance that I will get hired, let alone convenient pay,” 28-year-old Ashton (Name changed for security) said. Ashton is studying computer science in the U.S. He was frustrated about the threat of IS as well. “IS is just a few miles away from Erbil. I am from the town of Makhmour, and it is under IS rocket-fire everyday,” he added. “Am I going to go back to Makhmour to be killed or slaughtered by IS at any time? Of course no,” he concluded.

By Sarkawt Shamsuldeen

Source: eKurd

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: flee, Kurdistan, Young Kurds

No One more worry about Massoud Barzani loosing power in Kurdistan than Turkey,

August 22, 2015 By administrator

Barzani-Turkish AirforceBarzani turn Iraqi Kurdistan to Turkish province, and diverted all oil pipeline through Turkey now Kurdistan become hostage to turkey.

Ankara is concerned about preserving the current state of Turkish-Iraqi Kurdistan ties, as political uncertainty hangs over Iraq’s Kurdistan region after President Massoud Barzani’s mandate expired without rival factions reaching an agreement to extend his term.
Weeks of rounds of debates between the rival parties failed to produce a consensus before Barzani’s term officially ended at midnight on Wednesday, despite a last-ditch intervention by the US and British diplomats, and Ankara is watching the ongoing stalemate over the presidency warily.
The replacement for Barzani, who has held the post for more than a decade, could have implications on ties with Ankara, which has invested heavily in Iraqi Kurdistan, both in diplomatic and economic terms.
Only a decade ago, relations wavered on the edge of mutual hostility, if not an outright showdown, but they improved rapidly since 2007, due to cordial relations between the Turkish government and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) led by Barzani.
While Ankara has been cautious and has refrained from any public statement regarding the presidential debates among Kurdish parties in northern Iraq, diplomatic sources say the Turkish government may want to see the extension of Barzani’s mandate.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, Kurdistan, power, Turkey

Iraqi Kurdistan’s Barzani faces an uncertain political future

August 4, 2015 By administrator

Iraqi Kurdistan President Massoud Barzani. Photo: Reuters

Iraqi Kurdistan President Massoud Barzani. Photo: Reuters

ERBIL-Hewler, Kurdistan region ‘Iraq’,— Turkey’s air strikes in Iraqi Kurdistan have increased the pressure on regional president Massud Barzani, who is a key player in the US-led anti-jihadist war but faces an uncertain political future.

Barzani, the 68-year-old leader of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), has been at the helm of Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region for 10 years.

His term was extended for two years in 2013 and expires on August 19

Barzani argues his leadership is crucial to the fight against the Islamic State (IS) group but the other parties in Kurdistan seem to agree they will not give him another free ride.

“The KDP has asked us to extend the president’s term again but we have rejected this and it is now necessary to find a solution,” said Imad Ahmed, a political bureau member of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK).

The PUK of former Iraqi president Jalal Talabani is the KDP’s historic rival but the relatively recently founded Gorran (Change) party has six more seats with 24.

Together with Islamist parties, they control 59 of the 111 seats in the Kurdish regional parliament that elects the president.

“If it were a stable democratic system, they would just vote him out of office. But it’s not,” said Kirk Sowell, a Jordan-based political risk analyst who is the publisher of the biweekly newsletter Inside Iraqi Politics.

Barzani and his clan hold several key positions that give him control, for example, of the intelligence service and key media outlets.

With no solution in sight as the clock ticks down to the deadline, Kurdistan’s main factions are entering a phase of intense negotiations.

The air campaign Ankara launched inside Iraq against its own Kurdish rebels late last month has left Barzani in an uncomfortable position.

The Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) is outlawed in Turkey and has long had mountain bases on the Iraqi side the border but the flare-up prompted Barzani’s office to ask the rebels to take their struggle elsewhere.

“It’s really bad timing… It’s an impossible position because ordinary Kurds all support the PKK and Barzani can’t be perceived as being anti-PKK,” Sowell said.

Yet the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and Barzani’s party are inextricably tied to Turkey.

Interim period

The Turkish government and Turkish companies have invested billions in the autonomous Kurdish region.

The KRG also needs Turkey to export oil — virtually its only source of revenue — through the port of Ceyhan.

“They’re like an economic colony of Turkey,” Sowell said.

The Barzanis are Kurmanji-speaking Kurds, the same northern dialect used in PKK areas, and their relationship has often been one of rivalry.

Barzani’s KDP was criticised for failing to protect the Yazidi minority during a major IS onslaught a year ago, while the PKK and its Syrian sister party are widely seen as the Yazidis’ saviours.

The PUK draws its support from Sorani-speaking Kurds from the south of the autonomous region and has close ties with Iran.

But while the KDP’s domestic rivals have tried to gain traction from Barzani’s contradictions, analyst Michael Knights argued Kurdish parties had displayed a strong ability to compartmentalise issues.

“The Turkey-PKK clash has been used by the PUK and Gorran to critique the Barzanis but only in an opportunistic, tactical way,” said Knights, of the Washington Institute.

Gorran and the PUK want a more parliamentary system curbing the president’s powers while Barzani wants the president to be elected through a popular vote.

“Precisely because there is a security crisis, a financial crisis, a services crisis, and now these border tensions and strikes on Kurdish villages, we need to find a solution to the presidency issue,” Imad Ahmed said.

“But the PUK is trying to approach this by looking for consensus… It would not make sense to add another problem,” he said.

However Abdulrazaq Ali, spokesman of the Gorran party, said the only thing all the parties might agree on in the next few days is to disagree for a little longer.

“Because of the KDP party’s stubborn stance on our demands, it is possible we will not solve this issue through consensus,” he said.

“I think that when Barzani’s term ends on August 20, he will enter a phase of interim presidency until the constitution is amended or early elections produce a replacement,” Ali said.

Read more about The Monarchy of Iraqi Kurdistan

Source: Ekurd

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, Kurdistan, political future

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