Khaleej Times

Iraqi forces take full control of Kirkuk from Kurd fighters

- Reuters

baghdad — Iraqi forces took control on Friday of the last district in the oil-rich province of Kirkuk still in the hands of Kurdish Peshmerga fighters following a three-hour battle, security sources said.

The district of Altun Kupri, or Perde in Kurdish, lies on the road between the city of Kirkuk — which fell to Iraqi forces on Monday — and Erbil, capital of the semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan in northern Iraq that voted in a referendum last month to secede from Iraq against Baghdad’s wishes.

A force made up of U.S-trained Iraqi Counter-Terrorism Service units, Federal Police and Iranianbac­ked fighters known as Popular Mobilisati­on began their advance on Altun Kupri at 7:30 a.m. (0430 GMT), said an Iraqi military spokesman.

Kurdish Peshmerga forces withdrew from the town, located on the Zab river, after battling the advancing Iraqi troops with machine guns, mortars and rocket propelled grenades, Iraqi security sources said. Neither side gave immediate informatio­n about casualties in the fighting.

The Iraqi central government forces have advanced into Kirkuk province largely unopposed as most Peshmerga forces withdrew without a fight.

The government advance has transforme­d the balance of power in northern Iraq and is likely to scuttle the independen­ce aspiration­s of the Kurds, who voted overwhelmi­ngly on September 25 to secede from Iraq and take the oil fields of Kirkuk with them.

The fighting at Altun Kupri marked only the second instance of significan­t violent resistance by the Kurds in Kirkuk province. Dozens were killed or wounded in the previous clash on Monday, the first night of the government advance.

Altun Kupri is the last town in Kirkuk province on the road to Erbil, lying just outside the border of the autonomous region establishe­d after the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003.

Iraqi forces are seeking to reestablis­h Baghdad’s authority over territory which the Kurdish forces occupied outside the official boundaries of their autonomous region, mostly seized since 2014 in the course of the war on Daesh militants.

Iraq’s top Shia cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali Al Sistani, called on Friday for the state to protect Kurds in northern Iraq, a rare political interventi­on by a figure whose words have the force of law for most of Iraq’s Shia majority. Sistani’s call, issued at the Friday prayer in the holy city of Kerbala by one of his representa­tives, came amid reports of abuses against Kurds in areas evacuated by the Kurdish Peshmerga including Kirkuk, Tuz Khormato and Khanaqin. —

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