Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

No pay, no oil, Kurds tell Iraq

- SINAN SALAHEDDIN

BAGHDAD — Iraq’s selfruled Kurdish region has halted oil exports over a payment row with the central government in Baghdad, the latest dispute in a long-troubled relationsh­ip between the two administra­tions.

Responding to the move, the Iraqi government on Monday accused the Kurdistan Regional Government in northern Iraq of withholdin­g billions of dollars in oil payments from state coffers and smuggling crude oil and petroleum products out of the country for sale abroad.

The Kurds have unilateral­ly struck scores of deals with oil companies in recent years, even though the central government says the Kurds have no right to do so. The two sides reached a tentative deal in 2011 by which the Kurds send the oil into Iraq, the Iraqi government sells it, and each side then takes 50 percent of the revenue.

The Kurds announced late Sunday that they halted oil exports from their region because of a payment dispute.

The region’s Ministry of Natural Resources said in a statement that the central government has failed to send any money since May, even though the region had been exporting 50,000 barrels per day. A barrel is 42 gallons.

The statement said only two payments of $514 million have been made, and that the last took place in May 2011.

“After consultati­on with the producing companies, the ministry has reluctantl­y decided to halt exports until further notice,” the ministry said. “There have been no payments for 10 months, nor any indication from federal authoritie­s that payments are forthcomin­g.”

It added that oil exports will be resumed once the payment issue is resolved, and that the production in the interim will be diverted to the local market for processing and refining to generate an alternate source of cash flow for the producing companies.

On Monday, Iraq’s deputy prime minister, Hussain al-Shahristan­i, said the Kurds’ decision to halt oil exports will affect the 2012 national budget. He also accused Kurdish authoritie­s of smuggling large amounts of oil to neighborin­g countries, mainly Iran, or selling it on the local market.

The Kurds, he charged, were withholdin­g about $5.65 billion in revenue generated from unreported oil sales since 2010.

“Where the money went, I don’t know,” he said.

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