Tuesday 16 July 2024

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News Headlines:

Iraqi Kurds ‘fully control Kirkuk’ as army flees

“The speed of the jihadis’ advance has shocked the Iraqi government and its Western allies”

Iraqi Kurdish forces say they have taken full control of the northern oil city of Kirkuk as the army flees before an Islamist offensive nearby.

“The whole of Kirkuk has fallen into the hands of peshmerga,” Kurdish spokesman Jabbar Yawar told Reuters. “No Iraq army remains in Kirkuk now.”

Kurdish fighters are seen as a bulwark against Sunni Muslim insurgents.

Meanwhile, Iraq’s parliament has postponed a vote on a call by PM Nouri Maliki for a state of emergency.

The fall of Mosul, the country’s second city, to the Islamists sent shockwaves across the Middle East.

Kirkuk and the surrounding province of Tamim are at the heart of a political and economic dispute between Iraq’s Arabs and Kurds.

Kirkuk dispute

• Under Saddam Hussein’s programme of “Arabisation”, Kurds were driven from Kirkuk and replaced with settlers from the south, and the Iraqi government continues to assert control over nearby oilfields, with the backing from the local Turkmen community

• The Kurdistan Regional Government, which administers three provinces to the north-east, is pushing for Arabisation to be reversed

• In May 2013, Kurdish fighters took up positions on the outskirts of Kirkuk after Iraqi security forces were redeployed to deal with Sunni militants elsewhere

• A census and referendum on the affiliation of the province has been repeatedly delayed by the broader political crisis in Iraq

Led by the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS), the insurgents are believed to be planning to push further south, to the capital Baghdad and regions dominated by Iraq’s Shia Muslim majority, whom they regard as “infidels”.

But it appears the insurgents want to avoid tangling with Iraqi Kurds – a more cohesive fighting force – in provinces bordering Nineveh province where Mosul is located, the BBC’s Jim Muir reports from Kurdish-run Irbil.

A new insurgent offensive could come from the west, where they control the city of Falluja, 69km (43 miles) from Baghdad, our correspondent adds.

Washington says it is considering further assistance to Iraq in fighting the militants, without giving details.

The UN Security Council has condemned the attacks on Mosul and Tikrit, another town seized by the insurgents. The humanitarian situation around Mosul, where up to 500,000 people have fled, was “dire and… worsening by the moment”, it said.

BBC

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