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KRG Refuses to Ship Kirkuk Oil to Iran

KRG Refuses to Ship Kirkuk Oil to Iran
KRG Refuses to Ship Kirkuk Oil to Iran

The Kurdistan Regional Government is refusing to ship oil to Iran because Baghdad refused to consult the semiautonomous regime regarding the export program, a report by Bloomberg said.

Both the Iraqi government and the KRG pump oil from separate wells in Kirkuk, which makes control over the region’s fossil fuel wealth difficult to mark clearly.

Attacks by the self-styled Islamic State terrorist group caused Iraqi forces to flee the area back in 2014. Since then, the Kurdish Peshmarga Army has defended the region, Oil Price reported.

Ahmed al-Askari of the Kirkuk provincial council told Bloomberg over the phone that lack of communications with Baghdad has caused the disagreement over its export to Iran.

“Any oil deal or discussions about the province’s output, without involving the Kirkuk Governorate and its provincial council will not be successful,” the Kirkuk governor’s office added in an emailed statement.

Iraqi Kurdistan plans to hold a referendum on its political independence from Iraq in late September. The proposal has angered Iran and Turkey—two neighboring countries with large Kurdish populations of their own.

A new KRG “will eventually include Kirkuk”, according to Dilshad Shaaban, a representative from the KRG Parliament.

Baghdad intends to stymie KRG’s relationship with Turkey through the Iran deal. By rerouting Kirkuk’s oil to Iranian refineries, less Kurdish oil will reach the Ceyhan Port.

Similar conspiracies surround a related pipeline to Iran recently proposed by Baghdad.

Over the weekend, Iran’s Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh said Iraq and Iran had reached an agreement to commission a feasibility study of a crude oil pipeline that would export oil from fields in Kirkuk via Iran.

“In order to raise more legal problems in Kirkuk, Baghdad and Tehran have been trying for a long time to work on a pipeline to transport crude oil from the province to the Iranian territories,” Shaaban, who also serves as the deputy chairman of the Kurdistan Parliament’s Natural Resources Committee, told Asharq Al-Awsat.

 

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