The National - News

Iraq to set up joint parliament­ary dispute resolution panel with Kurds

- MINA ALDROUBI

Iraq will set up a parliament­ary committee to resolve disputes with its Kurdish region, including control over border crossings and sharing of oil revenue, a member of prime minister Haider Al Abadi’s ruling bloc says.

“The two sides are about to form a seven-member committee, including five members from Baghdad and two others from Kurdistan. The committee will review all controvers­ial issues between the two sides,” an MP of the Shiite National Alliance told the pan-Arab newspaper Asharq Al-Awsat.

“We expect the committee to produce fruitful results that can solve the crisis between Baghdad and Erbil,” the source said.

Relations between the central government and the semi-autonomous Kurdish region deteriorat­ed after the Kurdish Regional Government held a non-binding independen­ce referendum in September. Baghdad said the vote, which overwhelmi­ngly favoured secession, was against the constituti­on.

Baghdad responded by halting all internatio­nal flights to and from Iraqi Kurdistan and sending troops to retake disputed areas outside the region that were held by Kurdish forces.

The measures left the KRG in Erbil grappling with an economic and political crisis.

Baghdad has so far refused to hold direct talks with the KRG, but remarks by Kurdish and Iraqi officials this week suggest moves are being made to resolve the stand-off. Yesterday, a delegation representi­ng several Kurdish parties met Mr Al Abadi, according to his office.

Renas Jano, spokesman for the Kurdistan Democratic Party, said on Wednesday that the crisis was “likely to be resolved soon, in case the central government showed flexibilit­y”.

On Tuesday, a KRG spokesman said Baghdad had shown interest in starting dialogue.

“There was interest to send a delegation of the Iraqi government to the Kurdistan Region, to form a joint committee and to hold talks about border points, airports, the region’s dams,” Safin Dizayee said.

Ihsan Al Shamri, an adviser to the Iraqi prime minister, said on Monday that the government was likely to decide on several issues before holding talks with Erbil. He said the talks would include “taking over Kurdistan’s border crossings with Iran and Turkey, and forming a committee to regulate land ports, customs and airports”.

In response, Mr Dizayee rejected handing border management to the central government, saying “the law states joint administra­tion” over border control.

The KRG is seeking to mend ties with Turkey and Iran, which threatened to close their borders to oil exports over the independen­ce vote. Iran this week reopened three border crossings with the Kurdish region shut since the vote. The Kurdish prime minister is also seeking to visit Turkey, according to the Turkish foreign minister.

“Ankara received a visit request from Kurdistan region’s prime minister Nechirvan Barzani,” Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Wednesday. “We want to be certain of some things. The request is being evaluated.”

The KRG has no choice but to reconcile with neighbouri­ng countries. The region is facing an economic crisis after losing revenue from oilfields in Kirkuk, a disputed area that was retaken by Iraqi government forces in October, and has a high rate of unemployme­nt.

Mr Cavusoglu said Ankara would play an “effective role” in resolving the dispute between Baghdad and Erbil.

 ?? AFP ?? An Iranian traveller arrives at the Iran-Iraq border crossing of Haji Omran, one of the posts between Iraqi Kurdistan and the Islamic republic that reopened
AFP An Iranian traveller arrives at the Iran-Iraq border crossing of Haji Omran, one of the posts between Iraqi Kurdistan and the Islamic republic that reopened

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