Oman Daily Observer

100,000 Kurds flee since Iraqi takeover

LACK OF SHIELD: Fear of sectarian reprisals is driving out Kurds from Kirkuk

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ERBIL/BAGHDAD: About 100,000 Kurds have fled Kirkuk for fear of sectarian reprisals since Iraqi government forces took over the city after a Kurdish independen­ce referendum condemned by Baghdad, regional Kurdish officials said on Thursday.

Baghdad’s forces swept into the multi-ethnic city of more than 1 million people, hub of a major oilproduci­ng area, largely unopposed on Monday after most Kurdish Peshmerga forces withdrew rather than fight. Iraqi forces also took back control of Kirkuk oilfields, effectivel­y halving the amount of output under the direct control of the autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in a serious blow to the Kurds’ independen­ce quest.

Baghdad’s recapture of Kirkuk, situated just outside the KRG’s official boundaries on disputed land claimed by Kurds, ethnic Turkmen and Arabs, put the city’s Kurds in fear of attack by paramilita­ries, known as Popular Mobilisati­on, assisting government forces’ operations in the region.

Nawzad Hadi, Governor of Erbil, the KRG capital, told reporters that around 18,000 families from Kirkuk and the town of Tuz Khurmato to the southeast had taken refuge in Erbil and Sulaimaniy­a, inside KRG territory.

A Hadi aide said the total number of displaced people was about 100,000.

Hemin Hawrami, a top aide to KRG President Masoud Barzani, tweeted that people had fled “looting and sectarian oppression” inflicted by Popular Mobilisati­on militia.

“Where is @UNIraq @ UNHCRIraq,” Hawrami said in another tweet, suggesting UN humanitari­an agencies were doing little to help newly displaced people.

Lisa Grande, the UN humanitari­an coordinato­r in Iraq, had urged all parties on Wednesday to do their utmost “to shield and protect all civilians impacted by the current situation”.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al Abadi said on Wednesday that security was being maintained in Kirkuk by local police backed by the elite Counter Terrorism Service, trained and equipped by the United States mainly to fight IS militants. “All other armed group should not be allowed to stay,” Abadi said.

Kurds comprise the largest community in Kirkuk followed by Turkmen, Arabs and Christians, according to the Iraqi Planning Ministry in Baghdad.

In another sign of rising tensions, Iraq’s Supreme Justice Council ordered the arrest of Kurdistan Regional Government Vice President Kosrat Rasul for allegedly saying Iraqi troops were “occupying forces” in Kirkuk.

KRG Peshmerga forces deployed into Kirkuk in 2014 when Iraqi government forces fell apart in the face of an offensive by IS insurgents, preventing the oilfields from falling into militant hands.

An Iraqi military statement on Wednesday said government forces had also taken control of Kurdish-held areas of Nineveh province, including the Mosul hydro-electric dam, after the Peshmerga pulled back.

Iran and Turkey joined the Baghdad government in condemning the Iraqi Kurds’ September 25 referendum, worried it could worsen regional instabilit­y and conflict by encouragin­g their own Kurdish population­s to push for homelands.

The Kurds’ long-time big power ally, the United States, also opposed the vote. With the referendum having given Abadi a political opening to regain contested land and shift the balance of power in his favour, it may prove a gamble that makes the KRG’s quest for statehood more elusive.

KRG Foreign Minister Fala Mustafa Bakir told broadcaste­r CNN that his side never meant to engage in war with the Iraqi army.

He said there was a need for dialogue between the KRG and Iraq to enable a common understand­ing.

The dispute, he added, was not about oil or the national flag but the future of two nations.

Crude oil flows through the KRG pipeline to the Turkish port of Ceyhan have been disrupted by a gap between incoming and outgoing personnel since Baghdad’s retaking of Kirkuk.

An Iraqi oil ministry official in Baghdad said on Thursday that Iraq would not be able to restore Kirkuk’s oil output to levels before Sunday because of missing equipment at two fields.

 ?? — AFP ?? A member of the Iraqi Kurdish forces straps a kalashniko­v riffle on the back of a youth at an unfinished housing project where displaced people fleeing violence in the northern Kirkuk province are taking shelter on Thursday in Erbil.
— AFP A member of the Iraqi Kurdish forces straps a kalashniko­v riffle on the back of a youth at an unfinished housing project where displaced people fleeing violence in the northern Kirkuk province are taking shelter on Thursday in Erbil.

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