Tag: Hoshyar Zebari

  • Iraq PM softens tone on Turkey, says rapprochement welcome

    Iraq PM softens tone on Turkey, says rapprochement welcome

    BAGHDAD | Fri Apr 5, 2013 11:41am EDT

    (Reuters) – Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said on Friday he would welcome rapprochement with Turkey, softening months of hostile rhetoric fuelled by Ankara’s engagement with Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region.

    Resource-hungry Turkey has antagonized Baghdad by courting Iraqi Kurds, who are at loggerheads with the central government over how to exploit the country’s oil reserves and share the revenues.

    Iraq's Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki speaks during the opening ceremony of the Defence University for Military Studies inside Baghdad

    Ankara and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) have been negotiating an energy deal ranging from exploration to export since last year.

    Officials and industry sources say there have been efforts behind the scenes to reconcile Baghdad and Ankara at the insistence of the United States, which fears a Turk-Kurd energy partnership could precipitate the break-up of Iraq.

    “Iraq welcomes any step towards rapprochement with Turkey on the basis of shared interests, mutual respect and good-neighborliness,” Maliki said in a statement posted on his website.

    Baghdad says it alone has the authority to control export of the world’s fourth largest oil reserves, while the Kurds say their right to do so is enshrined in Iraq’s federal constitution, drawn up following the U.S.-led invasion of 2003.

    Kurdish crude used to flow through a Baghdad-controlled pipeline running from Kirkuk to the Turkish port of Ceyhan, but exports via that pipeline dried up last December due to a row over payment.

    The KRG is now shipping small volumes of crude oil by truck to Turkey and is pressing ahead with plans to build its own export pipeline — moves that have prompted Baghdad to accuse Ankara of complicity in “smuggling” Iraqi oil.

    In an interview on Thursday, Turkey’s energy minister suggested “a structure” whereby Ankara would play an active role in distributing Iraqi oil revenues fairly.

    “We accept that any revenue that reaches any region of Iraq belongs to the whole of Iraq and this is also the correct thing,” Taner Yildiz said. “With everything we do we have to pay attention to the sensitivities of the Iraqi central government.”

    Besides the spat over oil, Maliki and his Turkish counterpart have also traded barbs for inciting sectarian tensions and summoned each others’ ambassadors in tit-for-tat maneuvers.

    “There are contacts,” Iraq’s Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari told Reuters in an interview on the sidelines of a conference in the Kurdish region’s city of Suleimaniyah in March.

    Zebari said a meeting between Maliki and Turkish President Abdullah Gul had almost materialized in Cairo, but was scuppered at the last minute.

    Asked whether improved relations between Ankara and Baghdad would come at Kurdistan’s expense, Zebari said: “No … as long as they are working and dealing within the Iraqi legal framework and constitution, it shouldn’t be affected.”

    (Reporting by Raheem Salman in Baghdad, Isabel Coles in Arbil; Additional reporting by Orhan Coskun in Ankara; editing by Mike Collett-White)

    via Iraq PM softens tone on Turkey, says rapprochement welcome | Reuters.

  • Where in the world is Angelina Jolie?

    Where in the world is Angelina Jolie?

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    Football watching and frolicking in the fall weather on Saturday is for mortals.

    For Angelina Jolie, Saturday is all business.

    She took a trip to Baghdad to meet with Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari. As a special envoy for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Jolie advocates for refugees around the world. On Friday, she told the Associated Press that with winter approaching, she’s concerned about the plight of hundreds of thousands of Syrians forced to flee their homes.

    Later Saturday, Jolie planned to fly to Irbil to meet Kurdish officials and will visit a Syrian refugee camp. According to CNN, Jolie has recently visited refugee camps in Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan to highlight suffering and the need for international humanitarian assistance.

    Brad Pitt, meanwhile, will soon begin promoting his latest film, Killing Them Softly, which is out Nov. 30.

    via Where in the world is Angelina Jolie?.

  • Iraqi foreign minister set to visit Turkey

    Iraqi foreign minister set to visit Turkey

    Iraqi foreign minister set to visit Turkey

    (AFP)

    11 October 2011

    ANKARA — Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari will visit Turkey on Wednesday for talks on stopping recent surging attacks by Kurdish rebels which have prompting Ankara to consider a land operation, a senior Turkish diplomat said.

    “The Iraqi foreign minister will be in Turkey on Wednesday and Thursday upon our invitation as part of a working visit,” the diplomat told AFP speaking on condition of anonymity.

    “The fight against terrorism will figure high on the agenda of the talks,” he added.

    Turkey’s parliament extended on October 5 the government’s mandate to order military strikes against Kurdish rebels holed up in neighboring Iraq.

    A surge of attacks by the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) also targeting civilians are piling pressure on Ankara, which has threatened to launch an incursion into northern Iraq by its land forces to root out rebel bases.

    Turkey repeatedly calls on the Iraqi government not to allow its territory to be used as a springboard by the PKK for attacks in Turkey, and if not threatens to continue strikes.

    Turkish warplanes have bombed rebel bases in northern Iraq several times since August, killing between 145 and 160 rebels, according to the general staff.

    The air strikes have threathened relations with neighbouring Iraq, which summoned Turkey’s ambassador in August to demand an immediate end to the attacks after it was alleged that Turkish bombings killed civillians.

    Turkey rejected the allegations.

    Zebari, a Kurd himself, is expected to hold a press conference with his Turkish counterpart, Ahmet Davutoglu.

    The situation at a UN-run camp at Makhmour in the north of Iraq is expected to be on the agenda of the meetings with Zebari, said the diplomat.

    Turkey has long been pressing for the closure of Makhmour, charging that the camp is controlled by the PKK and serves as a supply base of fresh militants to the organization.

    “This is an issue which is always on our agenda,” said the diplomat.

    Zebari is also expected to attend the inauguration of the Iraqi consulate in Gaziantep province, near the Syrian border.

    The PKK, listed as a terrorist group by Ankara and much of the international community, took up arms in Kurdish-majority southeast Turkey in 1984, sparking a conflict that has claimed about 45,000 lives.

    via Iraqi foreign minister set to visit Turkey.