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News / Kurdistan

Iraqi Kurdistan awaits Baghdad’s agreement with oil firms to resume oil exports

The acting minister of natural resources of the Kurdistan Regional Government said that they will not prevent the amendment of oil contracts and the companies have not agreed to the proposal to reduce the cost of oil extraction. Acting Minister of Natural Resources of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Kamal Mohammed said that the proposals made by the Iraqi Oil Ministry to the oil companies are not satisfactory for the companies. He added that the amount of money allocated by the Iraqi government for the production of a barrel of oil in the Kurdistan Region is much less than the cost of producing a barrel of oil by companies. "We will not prevent the amendment of oil contracts and there is a good understanding by the Iraqi Oil Ministry," he said.

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Attempts are being made to form a coalition for the Kurdistan parliamentary elections

Attempts are being made to form a coalition for the Kurdistan parliamentary elections between the Gorran Movement, the People's Front and Standard Institute. The National Council of the Gorran Movement will meet today to discuss a proposal to form a coalition for the Kurdistan parliamentary elections. According to (Draw) investigations, the meeting of the National Council of the Gorran Movement is dedicated to discussing a proposal of  Standard Institute officials, which is dedicated to the formation of a  coalition for the Kurdistan parliamentary elections. Standard Agency officials have been in talks with the parties to form a mass front for the Kurdistan parliamentary elections and are currently intensifying talks with the Gorran Movement and the People's Front. A source in Standard told (Draw) that the People's Front has agreed to any coalition and is ready, we are currently waiting for the Gorran Movement to agree to form the coalition. The Gorran Movement has previously submitted its lists for the June 10 elections and Choman Mohammed was the leader of the Gorran Movement list in Sulaimani. The People's Front has submitted its list of candidates in all four constituencies, with Lahur Sheikh Jangi in Sulaimani, Shadman Mullah Hassan in Erbil and Zikri Zebari in Duhok are leading the lists. If they form the coalition, they will have to re-draft their list of candidates and include candidates from all three parties in all four constituencies. For the sixth session of the Kurdistan Parliament Eligible Voters: 3,798,360 Registered: 2,901,080 or 76% Unregistered: 897,280 or 24% 🔹Erbil: 1,366,462 people are eligible to vote 🔹Erbil: 1,016,357 registered residents, 74% 🔹Sulaimani + Halabja: 1,496,152 people are eligible to vote 🔹Sulaimani + Halabja: 1,146,530 registered 77% 🔹Duhok: 926,746 people are eligible to vote 🔹Duhok: 738,193 people registered 80%  

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Kurdish oil smuggling to Iran flourishes

By Timour Azhari ERBIL, Iraq (Reuters) – Heading for Turkey to the north and Iran to the east, hundreds of oil tankers snake each day from near Kurdistan's capital Erbil, clogging the Iraqi region's often winding and mountainous highways. The tankers are the most visible aspect of a massive operation to truck oil from the semi-autonomous region of Iraq to Iran and Turkey in murky, off-the-books transactions that have boomed since an official export pipeline closed last year. Reuters pieced together the details of this flourishing trade through conversations with over 20 people including Iraqi and Kurdish oil engineers, traders and government officials, politicians, diplomats and oil industry sources. They painted a picture of a booming business in which more than 1,000 tankers carry at least 200,000 barrels of cut-price oil every day to Iran and, to a lesser extent, Turkey - bringing in about $200 million a month. The scale of the unofficial exports, which has not previously been reported, is one reason Iraq has been unable to stick to output cuts agreed with the OPEC oil cartel this year, Iraqi officials said. Iranian and Turkish officials did not respond to requests for comment. Iraqi oil ministry spokesperson Assim Jihad said the Kurdistan trade was not approved by the Iraqi government and state oil marketer SOMO was the only official entity allowed to sell Iraqi crude. These black tubes fill a massive tank with salty brine sucked deep from the ground below as part of an 870 million dollar project in the province of Salta. He said the government did not have accurate figures for how much oil was being smuggled into Iran and Turkey. "OPEC now has less patience for smuggling and has even been known to slap punitive measures on offending members. I doubt we'll see any retribution against Baghdad because it's well known that the Kurdish region lies outside central control," said Jim Krane at Rice University's Baker Institute in Houston. The business could also put Kurdistan on a collision course with close ally Washington, as it assesses whether the trade breaches any U.S. economic sanctions on Iran, according to a U.S. official. Until last year, Kurdistan exported most of its crude via the official Iraq-Turkey Pipeline (ITP) running from the Iraqi oil city of Kirkuk to the Turkish port of Ceyhan. But those exports of about 450,000 barrels per day (bpd) halted in March 2023 when an international tribunal ruled in favour of the Iraqi federal government's call for the shipments to stop - leaving the pipeline in legal and financial limbo. The federal administration in Baghdad, which has long held that it is the only party authorised to sell Iraqi oil, successfully argued that Turkey arranged the exports with the Kurdistan regional government without its consent, in breach of a 1973 treaty. 'NO TRACE' Tankers soon started taking Kurdish oil to neighbouring countries instead and the business accelerated this year after talks to reopen the pipeline stalled, industry sources, oil officials and diplomats said. Local officials said none of the proceeds are accounted for, or registered, in the coffers of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), which has been struggling to pay thousands of public employees. "There is no trace of the oil revenues," said regional lawmaker Ali Huma Saleh, who was chair of the oil committee in Kurdistan's parliament until it was dissolved in 2023. He put the trade at over 300,000 bpd, higher than most other estimates. Hiwa Mohammed, a senior official in the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), one of Kurdistan's two ruling parties, said the oil was going through border crossings with the knowledge of the regional and federal governments. KRG Treasury officials did not respond to requests for comment. The KRG Ministry of Natural Resources, which oversees oil trading in Kurdistan, does not have a spokesperson. A U.S. official said Washington was looking at the oil trade to assess compliance with sanctions on Iran. The U.S. Treasury Department declined to comment. A State Department official said: "U.S. sanctions on Iran remain in place, and we regularly engage with partners on sanctions enforcement issues, but we do not detail those conversations." A senior official at Kurdistan's natural resources ministry said oil production in the region was running at 375,000 bpd, of which 200,000 was trucked to Iran and Turkey, and the rest refined locally. "Nobody knows what happens to the revenues from the 200,000 smuggled abroad, or the oil derivatives sold to refineries in the region," said the official, who declined to be named because the sensitivity of the matter. CUT-PRICE CRUDE The crude is sold by oil companies in Kurdistan to local buyers at cut-price rates of $30 to $40 a barrel, or about half the global rate , which equates to at least $200 million a month in revenue, industry and political sources said. Kurdistan's oil production is majority controlled by eight international oil firms: DNO ASA (DNO.OL), opens new tab, Genel Energy (GENL.L), opens new tab, Gulf Keystone Petroleum (GKP.L), opens new tab, ShaMaran Petroleum (SNM.V), opens new tab, HKN Energy, WesternZagros, MOL's (MOLB.BU), opens new tab Kalegran and Hunt Oil Company. Hunt Oil, based in the United States, declined to comment. The other seven companies did not respond to requests for comment, nor did local company KAR Group, a major player in Kurdistan. While most oil production halted when the pipeline closed, some companies including DNO, Keystone and ShaMaran have said in statements they have since started producing crude for sale to buyers within Kurdistan. ShaMaran said the average price of oil it sold in the first three months of 2024 was $36.49 per barrel while Keystone said in June that sales of crude from the Shaikan Field this year were bringing in about $28 a barrel. The industry sources said approved local buyers take the crude from oil companies and sell it on through middlemen for export, without the knowledge of the producers. The vast majority of the trucked oil goes to Iran, most of the industry and political sources said, via official Iraqi border crossings including Haji Omaran, or via Penjwen further south. From there, it is loaded onto ships at Iranian ports in the Gulf at Bandar Imam Khomeini and Bandar Abbas - a trade route used in the past for Kurdish oil exports - or transferred by road to Afghanistan and Pakistan, industry, political and diplomatic sources said. Reuters could not determine what Iran, which faces difficulties selling its own oil products because of sanctions, gets out of the trade, nor who is receiving the oil in Iran. The PUK's Mohammed said it was sent to Iran to be refined into gasoline. Pakistan's petroleum ministry declined to comment. Afghan officials did not respond to requests for comment. BLACK-MARKET LABYRINTH The trade is the latest iteration of a long-standing Iraqi black-market oil business widely seen as benefiting political elites who are closely linked to business interests. Twelve people said officials in Kurdistan's two ruling parties, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) of the Barzani clan and the PUK of the Talabani clan, were the beneficiaries. "There is a labyrinth of black-market salespeople getting paid, and people approving those sales. It's not that they are just looking the other way. They're taking their share," an industry source working in the Kurdish oil trade said. A senior diplomat in Baghdad said political interests were so vested in the trade that resuming official exports via the pipeline, once seen as a priority, had dropped down the diplomatic agenda. "I'm not going to be advocating for this while they're all having a party," the person said. KDP officials did not respond to requests for comment about the black-market trade. Mohammed, the PUK official, did not comment on who might be behind it. Kurdish officials say the region was forced into the trade by the pipeline closure, which they see as part of a broader effort by Iran-backed Shi'ite parties in Baghdad to curb the relative autonomy they have enjoyed since the end of the first Gulf war in 1991. A senior Iraqi parliamentary official familiar with oil matters said Baghdad was aware of the details of the business but was avoiding public criticism as officials seek to resolve outstanding disputes with Erbil. Putting pressure on Erbil to stop oil smuggling would corner the region and deprive it of all sources of funding, which could result in its collapse, said the person, who declined to be named due to the sensitivity of the issue. The trade has been cited privately by Iraqi officials as being behind Baghdad's inability to stick to its OPEC production quotas, a bone of contention with OPEC's de facto leader Saudi Arabia. Jihad, the oil ministry spokesman, said Iraq, which has pledged to scale back output this year to make up for the overproduction, was committed to voluntary production cuts. For now, the sheer volume of tankers snarling up highways, and getting involved in accidents, is angering residents along major thoroughfares. "It's very painful," said Rashid Dalak, visiting the grave of his brother Rouzkar, who was killed in a crash with a tanker in May on the highway between Erbil and Sulaimaniya that leads to the Iranian border. "Despite passing through and damaging our roads and killing our loved ones ... no-one here has seen a dollar."  

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🔻Mansour Barzani is the leader of the KDP list in Duhok

For the Supervisor of the Kurdistan Parliamentary Election Campaign: 🔻Masrour Barzani to Sulaimani and Nechirvan Barzani to Erbil 🔻Mansour Barzani is the leader of the KDP list in Duhok 🔹According to an unofficial list published, (Mansour Barzani, son of Massoud Barzani, president of the Kurdistan Democratic Party KDP), is the leader of the KDP list in Duhok province. Although a source in the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) told (Draw): Mansour Barzani will supervise the election campaign in Duhok, but according to the unofficial list published, Mansour Barzani is number one and leader of the KDP list in Duhok  In Erbil, Nechirvan Barzani will lead the campaign and Pashtiwan Sadiq and Omid Khoshnaw will be on the KDP list. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Masrour Barzani is overseeing the KDP's election campaign in Sulaimani province.

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Turkey's new invasion of the Kurdistan Region

🔻 Since the beginning of the Turkish operation (June 15 to today), Turkey has carried out 238 bombings and attacks inside the Kurdistan Region 🔻 From 1991 to this year (702) civilians have been killed in the Kurdistan Region, (344) citizens have been martyred and (358) wounded.  🔻 (162) villages have been evacuated and (602) villages are in danger of being evacuated. 🔻 Since the beginning of (2024) until now, turkey has conducted  (176) attacks and bombings in the Kurdistan Region; 🔹 In Duhok province: (526) attacks and bombings (49%). 🔹 In Erbil province: (405) attacks and bombings (38%). 🔹 In Sulaimani province: (135) attacks and bombings (12%). 🔹 In Nineveh province: (10) attacks and bombings (1%). 🔻 There are 71 Turkish military bases in the Kurdistan Region. 🔹 (17) bases and headquarters are located in Syedkan and Mergasur in Soran administration (24%). 🔹 (23) bases and headquarters in Amedi (32%). 🔹 (31) bases and headquarters in Zakho (44%)

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Turkish military advances 15 km into Iraqi Kurdistan, triggering mass evacuations

  The New Arab /  Dana Taib Menmy The Turkish military has advanced 15 kilometers deep into Iraqi Kurdistan, targeting the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and forcing the evacuation of hundreds of villages, according to a conflict monitor's report on Sunday. The incursion, which represents a significant escalation in Turkey’s military operations, has unfolded amid a conspicuous silence from both Iraqi and Kurdish authorities, raising concerns over Iraq's sovereignty and the safety of its citizens. Ongoing operations have forced nearly 602 villages in Duhok province to evacuate, with villagers fleeing in fear of Turkish army shelling that has also scorched their farmland, according to a U.S.-based human rights organisation monitoring the conflict. Maj. Gen. Tahseen Al-Khafaji, spokesperson for the Iraqi Joint Operations Command, told The New Arab that the Turkish operation is political and unrelated to the Iraqi Joint Operations Command. He directed further inquiries to Iraq's foreign ministry, which did not respond to requests for comment. Efforts to contact Ahmed al-Sahaf, spokesperson for Iraq’s foreign ministry, were unsuccessful. TNA also spoke with Sakfan Sindi, deputy head of the parliament's security and defense committee from the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP). Sindi said he lacked information on the issue as parliament is on its summer break. He gave assurances that after the holiday, the committee would seek to understand the stance of Iraq’s prime minister and the commander-in-chief of Iraq’s armed forces. Last month, Turkey dispatched hundreds of troops and military vehicles into the Kurdistan Region, setting up checkpoints and conducting military patrols in Duhok province’s Barwari Bala area. The recent escalation has instilled fear among local villagers, leading to the abandonment of at least one village. “The new operation in the Barwari Bala area signifies the depth of Turkish military ground operations into Iraqi Kurdistan. Turkish Armed Forces have advanced 15 kilometers into Iraqi Kurdistan territory,” said the Community Peacemaker Teams (CPT), a U.S.-based human rights organization monitoring the conflict. “Since the start of the new Turkish military operation, Turkey has conducted 238 bombardments in Iraqi Kurdistan, primarily in the Duhok governorate. As a result of Turkish bombardments, more than 20,000 dunams of agricultural lands have burned,” CPT added. This incursion marks a significant escalation compared to Turkey's 2021 operation, dubbed Claw-Lightning, when Turkish forces advanced 7 kilometers into the Kurdistan Region, CPT reported. The campaign aims to curb threats from the PKK along the border. The PKK is designated a terrorist organisation by Ankara and much of the West, has waged an armed insurgency against Turkey for decades in a struggle for greater Kurdish rights. Turkish operations have commenced near Kani Masi and Mount Metina in Duhok province. Turkish soldiers, armed with heavy weapons, have established several checkpoints, particularly near Balave and Belizani villages along the main road between Bamarni and Kani Masi subdistricts, about 57 kilometers northeast of Duhok city. Clashes between Turkish forces and PKK fighters have ignited numerous wildfires, with each side blaming the other for the blazes. In Sargale village, about 55% of agricultural land has been burned by Turkish attacks. Turkish military actions in Iraqi Kurdistan threaten at least 602 villages with displacement, with 162 already evacuated, according to CPT. Civilian infrastructure has also been affected, including the destruction of a school in Amedi district’s Mizhe village and an Assyrian church in the town of Mishka. The Iraqi government and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) have yet to issue statements regarding the increased hostilities in Duhok province. Earlier this year, Baghdad classified the PKK as a banned organisation before Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan visited Iraq in April. Both nations signed several agreements, including those related to security. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan visited Baghdad on April 22, marking his first state visit to Iraq since 2011. During the visit, both countries signed a joint security agreement allowing Turkey to conduct military operations against the PKK deep within Iraqi territory. In return, Iraq will receive increased water flow from Turkey. However, Ankara’s persistent military strikes and ground troop deployments have caused fear among the local villagers of Duhok province’s mountainous regions. Many residents fear displacement due to constant mortar shells and gunfire. CPT data indicates that Turkey has conducted over 1,076 attacks on the Kurdistan Region and Nineveh province in 2024. On Thursday, a Turkish defense ministry announcement confirmed that one of its soldiers was killed by the PKK in Duhok province.  

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KDP and PUK's Silent Killing in Iraqi Kurdistan

Draw Media Dr. Hawre Hasan Hama, lecturer at the University of Sulaimani, PhD in Peace Studies The Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) kill us either quickly and suddenly or slowly and insidiously. For years, the Kurdistan Region’s ruling parties killed people directly and openly. The armed conflict between the KDP and the PUK in the mountains during their armed struggle against the former Ba’ath regime and later during the civil war in the 1990s were examples of deliberate and direct killings. Even today, the rivals are ready to kill anyone openly and directly who they feel poses a threat to their survival. Their efforts to keep the armed forces under their control and to militarize Kurdish society are clear. The killing of demonstrators and journalists and the attacks on opposition headquarters are clear examples of deliberate and open killings. Over the past twenty years, the KDP and the PUK have reached a general reconciliation, agreeing not to fight each other anymore and not to kill people's sons. Instead, they created a political system of governance that does the killing for them. The two-party rule produces indirect violence against the Kurdish people in an organized and legal manner. While direct violence is rarer these days, indirect violence that slowly kills civilians is everywhere. The KDP-PUK governance style is characterized by social injustice, weak rule of law, the militarization of civil society, corruption, waste of public resources, and the politicization of all sectors. In other words, this type of governance is the root cause of the deaths of citizens. The KDP and the PUK are primarily responsible for the poor quality of health care, welfare, social services, the courts, electricity, water, roads, and the environment. The most common forms of indirect violence in the Kurdistan Region are the poor quality of infrastructure and services, a rigged economic system, human rights violations, and the weak rule of law. First, the poor quality of infrastructure and services is responsible for numerous preventable deaths. Take the Kurdistan Region’s poor roads and traffic systems. Hundreds of people are killed each year in traffic crashes and thousands are injured. This is a solvable problem that is not being adequately addressed by the political authorities. If traffic and road systems are more orderly, many deaths can be prevented. Or, take the underdevelopment of the health care system. The lack of basic medical supplies, equipment, and pharmaceuticals ensure that patients do not get the quality of care that they deserve and need. Again, it is the Kurdistan Region’s leadership that bears responsibility. Second, the economic system is rigged in favor of those with close connections to the political parties. They control the market, businesses, the private sector, and job opportunities. They dole them out based on partisan interest. In the KDP’s zone, contracts and jobs go to KDP-connected businesses; the same is true for the PUK in its zone of control. This creates systemic economic inequality where the rich profit at the expense of the poor. In the developed world, poverty is considered to be a kind of violence. To participate in impoverishing someone is to commit violence against that person. Because of their status, the poor cannot access healthy food, afford medical care, struggle with unemployment, and live without basic services and in areas where there are high levels of pollution. Poverty in the Kurdistan Region is the result of this rigged economic system, which has created widespread unemployment. All the consequences of unemployment and economic inequality are indirect forms of violence. Thousands of young people are unemployed in the Kurdistan Region. The governance in the Region fails to provide equal job opportunities. The consequences range from migration to Europe, mental and psychological problems, inability to provide basic necessities of life, and (in some cases) suicide. Third, the KDP and the PUK are guilty of numerous human rights violations. Examples of these violations include, aggressive surveillance of the population, attacking critics, and arresting journalists. The statistics from the Metro Center, an independent non-governmental organization for Journalist Rights and Advocacy, reveal a concerning pattern of violations against journalists and media outlets in the Kurdistan Region. Despite some years of reduced incidents, the overall trend remains alarming, highlighting the ongoing challenges faced by the press in this region. This situation calls for sustained efforts to safeguard journalistic freedoms and ensure a safer environment for media practitioners. Again, the issues are systemic. Even when the government fails to pay salaries, public servants are unable to complain publicly about their problems.   Finally, the parties have conspired to weaken the rule of law. The lack of a proper police force and impartial courts means that citizens are daily denied justice when their rights are violated. Without the ability to seek justice through legal means, they resort to revenge and violence or extra-judicial tribal arbitration. Therefore, the rule of the PUK and KDP is the biggest threat to human security in the Kurdistan Region. Yet, the reason why we do not consider their rule as a threat is that the KDP and the PUK are killing us indirectly and slowly, not openly and directly. Through their media, the parties present themselves as lawyers, not killers, and some of us believe them. To live a long and healthy life, we must reject the rule of the KDP and the PUK. The next elections will allow us to have good governance. We must take this opportunity to protect our lives. On the contrary, voting for the ruling parties is like supporting a terrible killer. Let us not support people who are our killers. The people of Kurdistan should vote for the opposition parties. The International community must support a free and fair election in Iraqi Kurdistan.

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Eight civilians killed in Turkish strikes

On June 15th, Turkish Armed Forces (TAF) started a new ground military operation in the Berwaly Bala area - maneuvering inside six villages in the area. On June 25th, Turkey established a checkpoint between Kani Bilave and Babire villages. The following day, Turkey began building seven new military bases in the Shive, Kani Tuia, Zireze, Demka, Bilejan, Korka and Gre Bia villages. Since the new military operation started, Community Peacemaker Teams (CPT) has closely monitored the escalation in the area and documented the impacts of the operation on civilians in the area. Villagers of Dergale Musa Bage informed CPT that on June 27th, Turkish Armed Forces had forced them to leave their village.  The new operation in the Berwaly Bala area signifies the depth of Turkish military ground operations into Iraqi Kurdistan. Turkish Armed Forces have advanced 15 kms into Iraqi Kurdistan territory. For its previous operation in 2021 codenamed ‘Claw Lightning’, Turkey had only advanced 7 km into Iraqi Kurdistan establishing itself in a village called Hrure.  Since the start of the new Turkish military operation, Turkey has conducted 238 bombardments in Iraqi Kurdistan, primarily in the Duhok governorate. As a result of Turkish bombardments, more than 20,000 dunams of agricultural lands have burned, primarily in the villages of Guharze, Balave, Barche, Sargale, Kane, and Ashke Dere in the Amedi region. Furthermore, in the village of Sargale approximately 55% of its agricultural land has been burnt by Turkish attacks. Turkish operations in Iraqi Kurdistan place at least 602 villages under the threat of displacement with at least 162 already displaced. Civilians from Sargale village reported to CPT that on July 4th, a Turkish military force reached their village with approximately 45 armored vehicles and settled behind Sargale village which intensified the clashes between PKK and Turkish Armed forces inside the village. Civilians from Sargale village feared that the presence of Turkish forces and the clashes inside the village led to the displacement of the village. Between January and July of 2024, Turkey has conducted 1076 attacks in Iraqi Kurdistan. 526 pf these attacks have occurred in the  Duhok governorate with a further 405 in the Erbil governorate, 135 in the Slemani governorate, and 10 in the Ninawa governorate. About 93% of attacks have been conducted by fighter jets. Throughout the year of 2023, Turkish Armed Forces conducted at least 1548 bombardments. In addition to eight civilians being killed this year, civilian infrastructure has also been destroyed and damaged. In late February, a school in Mizhe village in the Amedi district was targeted by fighter jets and destroyed. In the recent operations a monastery was damaged by fighter jets in Miska village also located in the Amedi district. On the evening of July 4th and July 5th, two Turkish bombs hit civilian houses inside Guharze village and damaged 3 civilian houses and a civilian car. Community Peacemaker Teams is highly concerned about this escalation of Turkish military operations and its harm to civilians and civilian infrastructure. CPT fears that if the operations continue, hundreds of families will be displaced.

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British Consul General Visits Draw Media

The new British Consulate-General in the Kurdistan Region, Andrew Beasley, and a diplomatic staff of the British Consulate-General in Erbil visited Draw media headquarter in Sulaymaniyah today. In a meeting with Draw Media editorial staff, the British consulate team discussed the upcoming election and the current situation in the Kurdistan region. Draw Media staff explained the situation of journalism and their expectation about the elections, oil and freedom of the press in detail to the consul and diplomatic staff of the British Consulate through Draw Media reports, books, statistics and data.      

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Position of political parties in the provincial constituencies of the Kurdistan Region

🔻 According to the results of the last Iraqi parliamentary elections in (2021) at the level of the provinces (constituencies) (Erbil, Sulaimani, Duhok and Halabja), the results of the votes and the parties seats in the Kurdistan Parliament are as follows: 🔹 The KDP was the first winner with (597 thousand 234) votes, which is (47%) of the votes, equal to (40) seats in the Kurdistan Parliament, according to the new electoral system. 🔹 The PUK came in second place with (214 thousand 716) votes, which is more than (17%) of the votes, equivalent to (20) seats in the Kurdistan Parliament. 🔹 New Generation Movement comes in third place with (204 thousand 885) votes, which is more than (16%) of the votes,  equivalent to (17) seats in the Kurdistan Parliament. 🔹KIU without having candidates in several provincial constituencies came in fourth place with (108 thousand 10) votes and nearly (9%) of the votes. which is equivalent to (8) parliamentary seats. 🔹 Justic Group without having candidates in several constituencies in the provinces and the entire province of Duhok was fifth with (64 thousand 156) votes, wich is (5%) of the votes and (6) parliamentary seats. 🔹 Gorran Movement without candidates in the constituencies of Erbil, Duhok and Halabja  came in  the sixth place with (22 thousand 91) votes. which is (2%) of the votes and (2) parliamentary seats. 🔹 Independent and other parties  with (39 thousand 835) votes which is more than (3%) of the votes and (2) seats in parliament, also (5) quota seats will be allocated to Christians and Turkmen communities.

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What are Turkish Armed Forces aiming for in Iraqi Kurdistan?

By Kamaran Osman On January 28, 2024, Turkish armed forces began construction of a military road network in Iraqi Kurdistan. This network connected the military bases built during 2021 in the 'Claw Lightning' operation in the Berwary Balla area of the Kani Masi subdistrict. Turkey constructed this road network in just a few weeks and reached 9km deep inside Iraqi Kurdistan. On April 10, 2024, the Iraqi border guard force constructed two military bases in the villages around Batifa. These military bases, established on Mily Siri and Chapere Englis, were built to stop Turkey from advancing further in Iraq Kurdistan. The construction of these two bases allowed hundreds of families from Kashan, Shilan, Banke and dozens of other villages to return to their villages. Some villagers had been prevented from visiting their lands for 13 years. Shortly after construction was completed, the Turkish Armed Forces began military advancements in the villages of the Berwary Balla area, located in the east of the Batifa district.  In the last ten days, Turkish armed forces have entered the villages of Ura, Seraro, Aradina, Keste, Chalke and Babire through the military roads built in January this year. During the last three days, nearly 1000 Turkish soldiers were witnessed going back and forth between the Gre-Barukh military base (Gre-Barukh is the most extensive Turkish military base in Iraqi Kurdistan, which was built in 1997) and Metina mountain behind Bamarne subdistrict. Since the morning of June 25, Turkish Armed Forces have set up a checkpoint between Babire and Kani Belave villages, and whoever travels on that road will have their IDs checked by Turkish soldiers.  Turkey's current goal is to establish a security line from Shiladze to Batifa. This security line travels through Deraluke, Bamarne, Kani Mase and Begova subdistricts. The Turkish army would control all the villages, mountains, lands, valleys, and rivers behind this line. In the future, military clashes will happen inside urban areas, and the towns will be the battlegrounds. Another goal of Turkey's military operation is to reach Hawt Tabaq mountain through Shiladze and then control the Gara mountain range. If this happens, the KRG will lose 70% to 75% of its power in the Duhok governorate. At the same time, this military maneuvering is a response to the Iraq border guards'  recent base building to prevent Turkey from further entering Iraqi Kurdistan this year.  If Turkey achieves their goal in this military operation, then dozens of villages and towns will face serious threats, and hundreds of villagers and civilians will be displaced. An essential portion of Kurdistan's land would be in the hands of the Turkish Armed Forces, and it would be almost impossible to take it back to the KRG and Iraqi government's power.

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Kurds drifting away from democracy

In Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan, regional elections are being repeatedly postponed, institutions weakened and structures are becoming more autocratic By Birgit Svensson Super election year 2024: half the world is going to the polls. India, the world's most populous nation, has voted, elections are taking place in Algeria and Tunisia, just as in Britain, France, Austria and the entire European Union. The list is a long one. Elections are a talking point everywhere, with discussions on fairness and credibility, fraud and manipulation. It is quite a different story in the Kurdish region of Iraq, where elections are not on the cards and those responsible are doing everything to ensure it stays that way. The Kurdish regional government's mandate ran out two years ago, but still elections are being repeatedly put off. Like now. Just a month before the last scheduled election date on 10 June, the ballot was cancelled yet again. "Who needs elections here," joked a senior member of the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP) in Erbil. "Elections, what are they?" jeered students at the University of Kurdistan Hewler (KUH) in the capital of the Autonomous Region Kurdistan. "Elections in Kurdistan are flawed," says Thomas Schmidinger, Associate Professor at the KUH, summarising the matter. The Austrian lectures in politics and international relations at the university and has lived in Iraqi Kurdistan for years. The autonomous parliament has no say, he adds. "Two dynasties govern here." In the provinces of Erbil and Dohuk the Barzani clan holds power, in Sulaymaniyah it is the Talabanis. The two families work everything out between themselves, says Schmidinger. Kurdistan in crisis Newly emerging opposition parties threaten to disrupt this power structure, he says. The two families are afraid of such developments. Since October 2022, when the first regular election date was set, the parties have been locked in incessant conflict. Sometimes one party doesn't want to take part in the elections, sometimes it is the other. Institutional squabbles such as the recent row over the electoral commission serve as a pretext for the postponements. Iraqi Kurdistan, the three autonomous provinces in the northeast of Iraq, the showcase project for democracy and economic growth, is mired in crisis. Things have been going downhill since 2013 with no progress for two years. While the rest of Iraq is currently making robust progress, Kurdistan continues on its downward trajectory. Officials say it is all the fault of the IS terror militia, the pandemic and Baghdad. Politicians in the Iraqi capital aren't well-disposed towards the Kurds, they say. Some even claim a deep enmity between Baghdad and Erbil. Akin to the era of Saddam Hussein, who fought the Kurds because they repeatedly rose up against him. But now, there's a new narrative doing the rounds concerning who or what might be responsible for Kurdistan's misery: ask around in Erbil, it is neighbouring Iran that's to blame for everything. This theory claims Iran wants to weaken the Kurds, in particular the KDP, which is dominated by the Barzani clan. There's a reason why the Kurds' number one enemy is no longer in Baghdad, but Tehran. Since the Hamas attack on Israel and the subsequent outbreak of the Gaza war in October, there have been increasingly frequent missile and done attacks on targets in Iraqi Kurdistan. The airport in Erbil has already been attacked several times, the homes of influential Kurds near Erbil were bombed and destroyed, civilians killed. Iran is firing on its neighbour. But this view doesn't go far enough to explain the problem. Dlawer Ala'Aldeen takes a deeper dive when analysing the Kurds' precarious situation. For the director of the renowned think tank MERI (Middle East Research Institute) and former higher education minister for the Kurdish regional government (KRG), the current crisis is inherent in the system. Central government in Baghdad is unwilling to push ahead with decentralisation as stated in constitution and demanded by the Kurds, he says. The federalism enshrined as Iraq's political system only exists on paper. This is also evident from the example of the provinces of Basra and Anbar, also striving for autonomous status like the Kurds, something vehemently rejected by Baghdad. Western partners remain silent This is why elections in Kurdistan aren't the same as they are elsewhere. Nevertheless, Ala'Aldeen continues, western partners with whom the Kurds feel an alliance, regard elections to the regional parliament as a domestic Iraqi matter and aren't doing enough to insist that they be carried out. If American, British, French and even German heads of state shake hands in Erbil and ignore Baghdad, this isn't fostering greater understanding but rather confirming that the Kurds – and above all the Barzani-dominated KDP – can do whatever they want, says Ala'Aldeen. This was how the KDP grew to be Kurdistan's most powerful party. Whereas the Talabani clan's PUK (Patriotic Union of Kurdistan) seeks a productive relationship with Baghdad, this is rejected by the KDP in Erbil. "In actual fact what we've got is a transitional government, as the legislative period has expired, but everyone still accepts it. So why hold elections if the legitimacy's already there?" asks Ala'Aldeen.  This although attempts to develop democratic structures here were very promising, making Kurdistan a showcase region in Iraq. While terror and civil war raged in the rest of the country, the three autonomous provinces in the northeast flourished. Investment waves came thick and fast, the region prospered. When IS was defeated in 2017, the Kurdish region's president at the time Masoud Barzani initiated a referendum on an independent Kurdistan. An overwhelming majority of Kurds voted in favour. Trouble was, Barzani hadn't asked his neighbours or other nations what they thought. In the end, even the United States, the Kurds' closest ally, rejected the idea of a separate Kurdish state ceded from Baghdad. Tensions between the two major Kurdish parties, the KDP and PUK, worsened following regional elections in 2018. Masoud Barzani stepped down to make way for his son and nephew, who have since shared leadership of the KRG and become increasingly authoritarian. Corruption and nepotism spread unchecked, journalists were threatened and even killed if they reported on the machinations of the Barzani clan, students were forced to join the party, public sector wages often went unpaid for months.   When, in March 2023, a court in Paris ruled that contracts concluded by the Autonomous Region of Kurdistan bypassing Baghdad were illegal and imposed penalties, Kurdistan was plunged into the most serious crisis since the toppling of Saddam Hussein in the year 2003. The pipeline that transported Kurdish oil to the Turkish port of Ceyhan for onward shipping has been closed ever since. Kurdistan can no longer export its oil. "This must change," says Hoshyar Zebari, long-time Iraqi foreign minister and now a member of the KDP's Central Committee. "We must hold the elections to gain new legitimacy and regain credibility," he says. He is sure that the ballot will take place this year. So, the party with the word democracy in its name wants to be democratic once again? There are many Kurds who doubt that.

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APIKUR made three proposals to resolve the financial entitlements of companies

The Association of the Petroleum Industry of Kurdistan (APIKUR) has expressed its satisfaction with the agreement reached between the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and the State Organization for Marketing of Oil (SOMO). In a post on social media platform X (formerly known as Twitter), APIKUR announced, “APIKUR member companies agree with the statement made by KRG in their recent Council of Ministers meeting that direct sales agreements between international oil companies (IOCs) and SOMO offer the best option for resolving the current situation.” The statement further emphasized the importance of these agreements providing IOCs with surety for payment through mechanisms such as upfront payment, escrow arrangements, or payments in-kind at Ceyhan. The Association of the Petroleum Industry of Kurdistan (APIKUR) has made three proposals to resolve the payment of companies' financial entitlements. The Association of the Petroleum Industry of Kurdistan (APIKUR)'s first proposal is to pay the money at the beginning of oil exports. The second is by depositing money in an independent bank account as a guarantee. The third option is that the Iraqi government can give the companies their shares in the form of barrels of oil in the port of Jayhan instead of money.    

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No real alternative: The failure of opposition parties in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region

DrawMedia Winthrop Rodgers - Middle East Institute Politics in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region is centered on the ruling duopoly of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK). Both parties wield significant influence over the administration of state institutions, the economy, and the media. Tens of thousands of Peshmerga, security forces, and Asayish are at their disposal and hundreds of thousands of public servants are part of their patronage networks. Despite these advantages, they are deeply unpopular with wide swathes of the population, who view them as corrupt, incompetent, and oppressive. An Arab Barometer survey released in 2022 found that 63% of respondents in the Kurdistan Region had “no trust at all” in the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG). Other political parties — broadly referred to as the opposition — offer themselves as alternatives to the KDP and the PUK, but are disorganized, divided, and largely unable to capitalize on public grievances about governance. At present, they do not constitute a viable alternative to the ruling parties. This weakness is due to constraints imposed by the Kurdistan Region’s political culture and system, as well as the uninspiring profiles of the current crop of opposition parties. As a result, voters who are disillusioned with the KDP and the PUK have little to gain — and much to lose — by supporting the opposition. Many people opt out of electoral politics altogether. Nevertheless, opposition groups represent a tantalizing part of the Kurdistan Region’s political landscape. Their dynamics and potential are critical to a comprehensive understanding of Iraqi Kurdish politics. This analysis will look at some of the main opposition groups and explain each group’s positioning and prospects in the upcoming regional elections, which were initially scheduled for October 2022 but repeatedly delayed. They are currently expected in the autumn. Collectively, the opposition faces three main challenges. First, patronage networks and partisan control of the security forces and the state more generally reinforce the power of the ruling parties and give them decisive advantages over the opposition. Second, the current opposition parties have failed to unite as a broad front and, as a result, compete with each other for supporters, which dilutes their influence. Third, the opposition’s failure to articulate a strategic vision does not inspire confidence. Moreover, voters have learned lessons from the failure of the Gorran Movement and are wary of its successors. A map of the opposition parties Overall, the opposition can be divided into five groups: 1) The Gorran Movement, 2) The New Generation Movement, 3) the Islamist parties, 4) newly founded, personality-driven parties, and 5) the voters and activists who have become turned off from electoral politics, but nevertheless stand in opposition to the ruling parties. The Gorran Movement The most consequential opposition party in the Kurdistan Region during the post-2003 era is the Change Movement, usually known by its Kurdish name Gorran. It was founded in 2009 by Nawshirwan Mustafa, who had been a major figure in the PUK for decades. The new party declared that its explicit goal was to dismantle the KDP-PUK duopoly and bring about constitutional changes that would establish the KRG as a parliamentary democracy, in contrast to the presidential system favored by the KDP. It also promised to combat corruption and unify and depoliticize the Peshmerga and the security forces. The new party sparked hope for many people that reform was possible. It quickly drew interest from across the population, with its support concentrated in Sulaymaniyah city. Several months after its establishment, it contested an election for the regional assembly in July 2009. While the KDP and the PUK — running on a joint list — won 30 and 29 seats respectively, out of the total of 111, Gorran managed a remarkable campaign and won 25 seats. This gave it a major platform to pursue its agenda, even if it could be overruled in the Kurdistan Parliament by the duopoly parties’ majority. Later, Gorran earned some criticism for not standing more closely with anti-corruption protesters during the months-long demonstrations in 2011, but maintained its upstart reputation ahead of the 2013 elections. In those polls, the movement became the second-largest party in parliament: The KDP won 38 seats, Gorran took 24, and the PUK was shunted into third with 18 seats. Somewhat paradoxically, this posed a major problem for Gorran and one that has haunted it ever since. It decided to abandon its opposition stance and go into government with the KDP and the PUK. It took over the speakership of the Kurdistan Parliament and supplied ministers to the eighth cabinet. In part, this decision was made in order to take the reins at the Peshmerga ministry and work on one of its major policy goals. Ultimately, Gorran proved ineffective at achieving anything substantive and crashed out of the cabinet amid a major dispute with the KDP in 2015 over the extension of Masoud Barzani’s term as president. At this point, the party began to lose steam, winning just 12 seats in the 2018 elections for the Kurdistan Parliament and re-entering government with the KDP and the PUK. Its supporters began to feel that it had been co-opted into the system it proposed to dismantle. The party was subsequently wiped out at the federal level in the 2021 elections for the Iraqi parliament. Currently, the party is wracked with internal disagreements and disputes over its leadership structure. Its elected officials have largely left the party and joined new opposition groups. Heading into the next elections, it looks like an utterly spent force. It is hard to overstate how disappointing this has been for opposition politics in the Kurdistan Region. Gorran’s trajectory dashed the hopes of many voters and produced deep wounds that have hurt not just the party itself, but all other opposition groups. If Gorran, with its unique leader and widespread support, could not achieve its goals, then it seems to most people that the other groups have little hope of succeeding where it failed. The New Generation Movement The New Generation Movement, known in Kurdish as Naway Nwe, was founded in early 2018 by Shaswar Abdulwahid, a real estate developer and owner of prominent Kurdish satellite TV channel NRT. (Full disclosure: The author worked as Senior English Editor at NRT between 2018 and 2021.) Abdulwahid was already well-known as a result of NRT’s outspoken coverage that frequently criticized the KDP and the PUK. During the 2017 independence referendum, he again played the role of foil by backing the “No For Now” campaign, which argued that Kurdish independence is the ultimate goal but the timing of the vote was ill-judged. While the campaign failed to make much headway — 92% of voters supported “yes” — the experience encouraged Abdulwahid to jump into electoral politics. New Generation participated in both the May 2018 federal elections and the September 2018 Kurdistan Parliament elections, winning four and eight seats respectively. However, disagreements between Abdulwahid and the party’s newly elected MPs in Baghdad and Erbil quickly arose. Eventually, none of the MPs elected to the federal Council of Representatives and just three of the MPs in the Kurdistan Parliament would remain a part of the party. In the October 2021 federal elections, the party rallied and won nine seats, mostly by taking advantage of the collapse in support for Gorran. Seven years after its establishment, it is unclear what New Generation has accomplished. Its policy program is vague at best and, historically, it has relied on petty stunts to attract media attention. For the most part, the party’s stance is reactive, following whatever story is angering the public at a given moment (public sector salaries, gasoline prices, migration, water shortages, etc.), rather than driving the conversation, which seems odd for an organization with a prominent TV station. Strategically, its leadership is cognizant that voters roundly punished Gorran for working with the KDP and the PUK. As a result, Abdulwahid almost obsessively turns down opportunities to engage pragmatically with other parties — both ruling or opposition — who then respond in kind by ignoring New Generation. Despite this poor track record, New Generation will likely end up as the largest opposition party in the next elections. The deficiencies of the other parties are enough to make it the most attractive option in an underwhelming field. Few of its supporters believe that it will make a substantial impact both because it has not articulated a coherent vision for the Kurdistan Region and its leadership is deeply mistrustful. There are decent, principled figures within the party, but it is evident to most voters and observers that New Generation is not the real deal. The Islamist parties The Kurdistan Region has always had a significant Islamist movement, which stands in contrast to the relative secularism of the KDP and the PUK. The movement largely operates at a social and grassroots level, but is also active in electoral politics. There have been several Islamist parties, which have splintered, merged, and reorganized themselves over time. At present, there are two main Islamist parties: the Kurdistan Islamic Union (KIU) and the Kurdistan Justice Group (KJG). The KIU, which is known in Kurdish as Yekgirtu, was founded in 1994 and is led by Salahaddin Bahaaddin. It is particularly strong in Duhok governorate. In the 2021 elections for the Iraqi parliament, Jamal Kocher, a KIU member running as an independent, won 56,702 votes. This was the most of any individual candidate across the whole country that cycle. The party currently has four seats in Baghdad and had five seats in the last Kurdistan Parliament. Some observers have linked the KIU with the Muslim Brotherhood. The KJG was formed in 2001 by Ali Bapir. It used to be known as the Kurdistan Islamic Group before a rebranding in 2021 and is referred to in Kurdish as Komal. It currently has one seat in Baghdad and had seven in the last Kurdistan Parliament. The KJG tends to be more socially conservative and outspoken than the KIU. On their own and collectively, the Islamist parties do not represent a significant threat to the ruling duopoly. Instead, their approach emphasizes building support within society for Islamist attitudes. For example, both parties have proposed and supported measures that attack the LGBTQ+ community. However, they seem largely uninterested in seeking higher-level positions within the government beyond a few seats in parliament. By doing so, they maintain a seat at the broad table of governance in the Kurdistan Region and the ability to influence the ruling parties, while avoiding the responsibilities of actual governing. This pragmatic approach starkly contrasts with New Generation. New personality-driven parties With election season approaching, two disaffected figures from established parties have sensed an opportunity and formed their own political vehicles. These new parties are largely defined by their leaders, rather than being driven by a specific ideology or set of policies. They are viewed by voters as bids for continued relevance, rather than the kind of broad-based movements that could pose a real challenge to the ruling parties, at least for now. The most authentically opposition of the two is Ali Hama Salih’s National Stance Movement. Hama Salih is a former Gorran MP with a reputation for exposing alleged instances of corruption on the part of KDP and PUK officials. As his former party crumbled, Salih was able to keep his political reputation intact by distancing himself from the Gorran leadership and resigning from parliament in February 2023. Out of office, he attempted to bring together other Gorran dissidents to form a new party that could recapture the old energy. This was largely unsuccessful because of the personal differences between the ex-Gorran factions, but he went ahead and established a new party anyway in March 2024. Hama Salih’s rhetoric often skews conservative. Recently, he has decried the “new, strange norms” being introduced into Kurdish society from outside. The other personality-driven party is led by former PUK co-leader Lahur Sheikh Jangi. He had been popular with the party’s grassroots, particularly for his strong criticism of the KDP and the Barzanis. In July 2021, however, he was ousted by his estranged cousin (and now uncontested PUK leader) Bafel Talabani. For several years afterwards, it was unclear whether Sheikh Jangi would form a new party or seek accommodation and reconciliation within the PUK. Eventually, he chose the former and announced the establishment of the People's Front in January 2024. Both of these parties are defined by their leaders. This is not unusual in the patriarchal, top-down party structures common in the Kurdistan Region, but it exposes a deep flaw in their strategies. Their success is dependent on the personal appeal of their leaders, which is necessarily limiting. In Hama Salih’s case, his inability to convince the other Gorran dissidents, who are his natural political allies, to join him suggests that he does not have the leadership skills to manage a party organization. Meanwhile, Sheikh Jangi carries the baggage of his split with the PUK and will have difficulty bringing his former comrades with him into the new party or attracting authentic opposition supporters. Moreover, he is perceived as having grown close with Masrour Barzani of the KDP as part of his struggle with Bafel Talabani. The mere appearance of working with such a hated figure undercuts his personal and political reputation, whatever the truth may actually be about their relationship. As a result, it seems unlikely that either new party will have much of an impact at the ballot box or in sparking policy change. Turning away from partisan politics The dominance of the ruling duopoly, the disillusionment with Gorran, and the perceived unsuitability of the other opposition parties mean that many voters are left without a party that they can enthusiastically support. As a result, they stay at home on election day. Turnout has been steadily dropping in each election for the Kurdistan Parliament since 1992, when 87% of eligible voters cast ballots. Turnout was 75% during both of the “Gorran elections” in 2009 and 2013, but dropped to 60% in 2018. This is comparatively better than the turnout in recent federal elections, but the trendline is not encouraging. Moreover, low-turnout elections tend to benefit the ruling parties. This says more about elections in the Kurdistan Region and their ability to create legitimacy than it does about overall levels of political activity within society. Across social and class groups, Iraqi Kurds have a high degree of political engagement and sophistication — in many ways, far greater than their counterparts in the West. Decreasing turnout and a lack of support for opposition groups reflects a fundamental disconnect in Kurdish politics between the electoral process and the prospects for actually creating change. Looking at the situation, it is hard to blame people for feeling that their vote does not matter. Many people are actively looking for alternatives to party politics. This is clearly seen in the experience of the Dissenting Teachers Council. Over the past year, it organized a strike in Sulaymaniyah governorate to pressure the KRG about unpaid public sector salaries that lasted for five months. What the public saw was a highly disciplined and effective political movement that drove the popular conversation about its signature issue. Members of the Council told The Middle East Institute in recent interviews that they have been repeatedly approached by both the ruling and opposition parties about running for parliament. They consistently refused such entreaties and have also resisted calls from supporters to form their own electoral list. This shows that opposition politics is still active, but that the ballot box currently holds little appeal. Conclusion Voters are deeply frustrated about the political direction of the Kurdistan Region and disillusioned about the prospect for creating change through elections. On the one hand, this reflects the significant challenges that any opposition group faces in competing with the ruling parties and their structural advantages. The KDP and the PUK control the security forces — and are not shy about using violence and intimidation to enforce their political will — and oversee pervasive patronage networks that shape political behavior in insidious ways. The ruling parties largely control the media, with notable exceptions like New Generation-owned NRT, and are deeply embedded in state institutions like the judiciary. Even when opposition groups like Gorran make a play for power, the prospects for success are low and the risk of co-option is high. The recent controversy over the timing of the upcoming elections to the Kurdistan Parliament is instructive. Elections are moments of maximum exposure and leverage for opposition groups, when the ruling parties actually have to face their constituents. There are real questions about how free and fair these elections are, but they offer opposition groups time and space to make appeals to voters. After an election, the ruling parties either co-opt opposition groups, as they did with Gorran, or ignore them, as they do with New Generation. Yet, the opposition has been a total non-factor in the dynamics around the repeatedly postponed elections, which were initially supposed to take place in October 2022. Other than issuing the occasional statement urging elections to go ahead as planned, the opposition was invisible. If there had been a groundswell of support for these parties, they may have been able to organize street protests or exert other kinds of pressure on Baghdad, the KDP, and the PUK to force them into action. However, this was not at all in evidence. As of writing, a new date has not been announced, but informed speculation suggests that the elections will be held by November at the latest. Depending on the results, the opposition parties may or may not be a factor in the government formation process, which is likely to be long, difficult, and divisive. The opposition’s failure to grasp this moment is due to its inability to present a united front or to articulate a compelling vision for what exactly they would do if given power. As a result, opposition support is naturally diluted. Fractured voting patterns pose little threat to the ruling parties and overt division between opposition groups turns off potential supporters, as does their inability to propose realistic plans for reform. To that end, opposition parties have a tough hill to climb because of the outsize power of the ruling parties, but ultimately blame must fall on opposition groups themselves for failing to address their own flaws.   Winthrop Rodgers is a journalist and researcher who focuses on politics, human rights, and political economy. His past work has appeared in Foreign Policy, the Index on Censorship, Al-Monitor, and Rest of World. 

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Massive fire at Iraqi Kurdistan oil refinery injures 14

A massive fire at an oil refinery in Iraqi Kurdistan raged for about 20 hours and injured at least 14 firefighters who on Thursday finally brought the blaze under control. The fire broke out in a major crude oil tank on Wednesday night before spreading to a second refinery on a road southwest of Arbil, capital of the autonomous northern region of Kurdistan, the civil defence agency said. Thick plumes of black smoke and balls of orange flame rose into the sky above the facility, an AFP photographer reported. The civil defence agency said the fire, the cause of which remains unclear, “started in one refinery before spreading to another”. A spokesman for the agency, Shakhwan Saeed, told a news conference on Thursday evening: “The fire has been 100 percent contained, and there is no longer any danger for the surrounding refineries.” He said 150 rescuers had been mobilised and 14 had been injured, with two in “critical condition”. Arbil governor Omed Khoshnaw earlier said three rescuers were being treated in hospital for burns and another 10 suffered breathing difficulties. The main storage tank that was impacted contained more than 5,000 tonnes of fuel, he said, putting the estimated cost of the damage caused at $8 million. The Arbil civil defence said four fuel tanks as well as three fire trucks were burned. “So far, we don’t know what caused it,“ said Khoshnaw, adding that it could have been an electrical short circuit. Saeed noted that the facility did not meet “any of the standards” set by the civil defence agency for safety. With Iraq experiencing scorching summers, the country has seen multiple fires in recent weeks, affecting shopping centres, warehouses and hospitals. Iraq is one of the world’s biggest oil producers and crude oil sales make up 90 percent of budget revenues. But exports from the Kurdistan region have been halted for more than a year in a dispute over legal and technical issues.

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