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| South Kurdistan oil & gas development | |
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| Tweet Topic Started: Nov 17 12, 1:25 (649,149 Views) | |
| ALAN | Jul 16 14, 11:16 Post #1601 |
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Once Kurdistan becomes independence there will be no need for such accounts the state will get its money directly without turkish involvement in our money....
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| Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time. | |
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| Zagros | Jul 16 14, 11:32 Post #1602 |
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Aframax to load KRG crude this week 16 Jul 2014, 10.18 am GMT London, 16 July (Argus) — The Aframax ship Genmar Strength will load an 85,000t cargo of Kurdish crude oil later this week at the Turkish port of Ceyhan. The ship is scheduled to arrive on 18 July. Although unconfirmed, indications are that the charterer is Hungarian integrated oil company Mol. Mol holds a 20pc stake in the Shaikan field in the Kurdish enclave in KRG, which is operated by London-listed Gulf Keystone Petroleum. Shaikan is on track to produce 20,000 b/d, doubling to 40,000 b/d by the end of this year. To date, most Shaikan crude has been exported by truck to the Turkish port of Dortyol and sold on the international markets. The Genmar Strength will be the first tanker to load crude from fields controlled by the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) for a month. Of four larger cargoes loaded to date, only one has been delivered - to an Israeli buyer. Three Suezmax cargoes remain on the water. United Leadership, has now returned to offshore Mohammedia on Morocco's Atlantic coast, having sailed away from there yesterday. It has been there since early June, apart from a brief relocation to offshore Tangiers earlier this month. The United Emblem, carrying its second cargo of KRG crude, is in the Arabian Sea, moving at 10.6kph and still showing 'east for orders' as the ship's destination, with arrival details unchanged at 1400 on 20 July. The third tanker, carrying the fourth cargo of KRG crude loaded so far at Ceyhan, is still on course across the Atlantic Ocean, and showing destination 'Brazil for orders'. Estimated arrival time remains 1300 on 25 July. The draft measurement of all three ships is unchanged. The KRG and the federal government of Iraq remain locked in a dispute over the legality of the KRG's exports. Baghdad has threatened legal action against companies lifting Kurdish crude not marketed through its marketing firm Somo. The KRG, for its part, said that it would consider taking legal action against the federal government if Baghdad does not cease trying to prevent loadings. http://www.argusmedia.com/News/Article?id=915623 |
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| ALAN | Jul 17 14, 12:31 Post #1603 |
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16tnWVPPpBQ |
| Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time. | |
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| ALAN | Jul 18 14, 12:42 Post #1604 |
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![]() Confirmed by Reuters http://uk.mobile.reuters.com/article/idUKL6N0PS3AI20140717?irpc=932 |
| Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time. | |
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| ALAN | Jul 20 14, 4:31 Post #1605 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--cfuFO4NFI https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xYh85UkDU14 |
| Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time. | |
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| Alendsh | Jul 21 14, 1:50 Post #1606 |
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Is it true that the USA has said to all customers and major companies to not buy Kurdish oil? I hope that is far from the truth! |
| Give nine, save ten. | |
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| ALAN | Jul 21 14, 2:24 Post #1607 |
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Source? |
| Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time. | |
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| Alendsh | Jul 21 14, 10:53 Post #1608 |
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http://www.npr.org/blogs/parallels/2014/07/15/331383343/kurds-may-have-oil-to-export-but-buyers-are-harder-to-find |
| Give nine, save ten. | |
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| ALAN | Jul 22 14, 2:44 Post #1609 |
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so far we havent had much issue from EU and other countries, US doesn't buy it but cant stop us selling it to other countries.
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| Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time. | |
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| Alendsh | Jul 22 14, 7:51 Post #1610 |
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Barzani should decelere independence as soon as possible, so the losers( Al Maliki and Al shahristani) have no chance to effect our oil export. We can easly replace Irans and Libyas oil export in few years.
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| Give nine, save ten. | |
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| ALAN | Jul 22 14, 3:26 Post #1611 |
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Kurdistan's Peshmerga force secures Kirkuk, its oil 21.7.2014 By Jeffrey Young - VOA KIRKUK, South Kurdistan,— The Kurdistan regional government has sent its Peshmerga troops into the adjacent province of Kirkuk to drive out insurgents, and to secure the area's rich oil fields. By doing this, the regional government has added a fourth province to the three it officially controls. The oil also provides revenue that could make an independent Kurdistan economically strong. Kirkuk, has fabulous oil wealth. It is an ethnically divided city with Kurds enjoying majority. For years, Kurdish, Arab and Turkmen factions fought each other. Then, insurgents including the Islamic State of Iraq and the Syria - or ISIS - unleased their terror. In June, Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Peshmerga troops, reputed to be some of the toughest fighters in this region, moved into Kirkuk to restore stability, and to protect the oil beneath it. A monument in Kirkuk, a well-head surrounded by swords, is highly symbolic of both the value of the province’s oil, as well as the fight to control it. Peshmerga member Mohamed Swani explains that Kirkuk’s oil now belongs to Kurds, not Baghdad, which objects to the takeover. “Now, this place is Kurdistan. The oil is for Kurdistan. We must keep the oil, and the defense of the land, for all the places in Kurdistan.” This reporter went out with the Peshmerga on a security patrol, to see how they keep the city and province safe, as well as the oil the Kurds want for their hoped-for independent state. We left the military compound and pulled out into the street, our vehicle packed with troops, guns always at the ready. The ride can be wild and bumpy, but the message put out by every Peshmerga patrol is clear - order will be kept, and those who challenge it face the barrels of many guns. Since these Peshmerga patrols began in June, Kirkuk has enjoyed more peace than at any time in the past decade. While this patrol covers the city, other Peshmerga units have been out in the province driving out ISIS and other insurgents. Some Iraqi government troops dropped their guns and ran when ISIS swept into Iraq, but the Peshmerga did the opposite - they engaged ISIS, known as Dash - and drove them out. Peshmerga Kamal Mohamed Mustapha explained. “You know, Dash came - to try to control Kirkuk. But when we heard about Dash trying to do that, we came over to Kirkuk, and took Kirkuk from them. We kicked them out of Kirkuk now,” said Mustapha. The Kirkuk oil field and its pipeline, and oil patch, Bai Hassan, are under Kurdish control. Their pipelines are now rerouted to send the oil north and on to Turkey, to the port of Ceyhan. Iraq’s central government has angrily reacted to the KRG’s takeover of Kirkuk and these oil fields. But the Kurds have made it clear that they will not give them back to Baghdad. This oil, as Kamal Mohamed Mustapha says, guarantees the viability of an independent Kurdistan. “This oil is the future of Kurdistan, so if there is no oil, there is no future,” says Mustapha. The Peshmerga say that if Baghdad wants to take Kirkuk back by force, they are ready to fight. Copyright ©, respective author or news agency, voanews.com |
| Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time. | |
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| ALAN | Jul 25 14, 7:12 Post #1612 |
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Kurdish oil nears US port despite concern in Washington Fri Jul 25, 2014 8:00am GMT (Repeats story published on July 24 with no changes to text) * Kurdish oil tanker approaching port of Galveston, Texas * Baghdad and South Kurdistan oil sales dispute intensifying * Washington has concerns about Kurdish sales, Iraq split By David Sheppard, Ahmed Rasheed and Timothy Gardner LONDON/BAGHDAD/WASHINGTON, July 24 (Reuters) - A tanker carrying crude oil from South Kurdistan is just two days away from arriving at a U.S. port, according to ship tracking satellites, despite Washington's long-standing concern over independent oil sales from the autonomous region. The United Kalavrvta tanker, which left the Turkish port of Ceyhan in June carrying oil delivered via a new Kurdish pipeline, is due to dock in Galveston, Texas on Saturday, Reuters AIS Live ship tracking shows. A sale of Kurdish crude oil to a U.S. refinery would infuriate Baghdad, which sees such deals as smuggling, and raises questions about Washington's commitment to preventing oil sales from the autonomous region. Washington has expressed fears that independent oil sales from Kurdistan could contribute to the break-up of Iraq as the government in Baghdad struggles to contain Sunni Islamist insurgents that have captured vast swathes of the country. But it also has grown frustrated with Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's handling of the crisis. Washington has pressured companies and governments not to buy crude from the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG), but it has stopped short of banning U.S. firms from buying it outright. The Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) has renewed its push for an independent state amid the latest violence roiling Iraq. Its relationship with Baghdad has deteriorated over what it sees as Maliki's role in stoking the crisis and over the long-running dispute over oil sales. On Thursday Carlos Pascual, head of the U.S. State Department's Energy Bureau, told Reuters that there had been no change of policy in Washington towards Kurdish independent oil sales, but he said he hoped the central government and the region could reach an agreement in time. Baghdad has threatened to sue anyone that buys Kurdish oil. "We have made people aware that whatever they buy entails certain risks, and we have consistently told them about that," Pascual said after a talk at Washington's Carnegie Endowment. "At some point Baghdad and Hewlêr have to come to an understanding of how the development and the export of those resources can contribute to Iraq's overall development," he said in a speech, one of his last official events before taking up a fellowship at Columbia University in New York. Pascual said that without a deal, conflict between the two sides risked becoming "more acute". The KRG has been emboldened amid the latest crisis in Iraq to take control of the long-disputed oil city of Kirkuk and to increase its territory by more than third as Iraqi forces fled the onslaught of Sunni insurgents aligned with the Islamic State of Syria and the Levant (ISIL). ISIL, which has now changed its name to the Islamic State, aims to establish what it describes as a "caliphate" stretching through eastern Syria and into western Iraq and beyond. BAGHDAD THREATENS TO SUE Trading sources in Texas, New York, London and Geneva have been unable to identify the buyer of the United Kalavrvta tanker's cargo. On Thursday it was rounding the Florida panhandle after navigating through the Bahamas. The ship carries approximately 1 million barrels of crude, which would fetch more than $100 million at international prices. The tanker still could change course and head away from the United States to Mexico or another country in Central or South America. The last signal received from its satellite tracking system was at 07:37 am GMT Thursday, indicating it may have turned the transponder off. On Thursday an official at SOMO, Iraq's central state oil marketer, reiterated that it would sue any company buying Kurdish oil and blacklist them from deals for Iraq's sizeable crude exports. "The government of Iraq will reserve the right to sue any company, refinery or trader that buys the Iraqi crude that KRG is illegally offering," an official from Baghdad's state oil marketer SOMO told Reuters. "Our foreign legal team is watching closely the movement of the vessel and is ready to target any potential buyer regardless of their nationality." The first tanker carrying crude from the Kurdish pipeline set sale from Ceyhan in May. Three others have sailed since then, but only one of the four has been delivered so far - into an Israeli port after a ship-to-ship transfer. The first, the United Leadership, has been moored off the coast of Morocco for more than a month, while another is now sailing towards Asia without a clear buyer listed. As the United Kalavrvta crossed the Atlantic, it was originally listed as sailing to Brazil, though without a specific buyer named in shipping fixtures. UNDER PRESSURE The KRG has so far declined to comment on any tanker sales, beyond denying that it sold oil to Israel. A spokesman for the Ministry of Natural Resources could not be reached on Thursday. The United States has not formerly banned purchases of Kurdish crude oil, but in recent months it has pressured companies - both at home and abroad - not to buy Iraqi crude from outside Baghdad's central oil sales system. Baghdad has withheld payment into the KRG's budget since January as part of the dispute, damaging the autonomous region's economy. The KRG desperately needs access to additional funds, and oil sales are the most obvious means to quickly raise cash. South Kurdistan began selling its oil independently of the federal government in 2012, trucking first small amounts of condensate through Turkey and then two types of crude oil. At least one tanker of Kurdish crude, which had been trucked into Turkey before being exported, has already gone to the United States. But Baghdad has increased its opposition to Kurdish sales since the launch of the KRG's own pipeline to Turkey in January. Both sides claim the Iraqi constitution is on their side. At the same time Washington has enjoyed a long-running relationship with the Kurds, whose Peshmerga forces helped U.S. special forces launch a northern front during the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Politicians in the regional capital Hewlêr are walking a line between pursuing a long-held dream of independence against alienating regional and international allies. They have so far declined to commit their Peshmerga forces to help Baghdad fight the Sunni militants of the Islamic State. But the Kurds have been involved in a number of skirmishes with IS, with which the region now shares a 1,000 km (620 mile) border. (Additional reporting by Julia Payne in London, Catherine Ngai in New York; editing by Jane Baird) http://af.reuters.com/article/commoditiesNews/idAFL6N0PZ71420140725?pageNumber=2&virtualBrandChannel=0&sp=true |
| Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time. | |
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| Zlatan10 | Jul 27 14, 9:30 Post #1613 |
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USA will buy kurdish oil ? ![]() http://mobile.nytimes.com/reuters/2014/07/26/world/middleeast/26reuters-usa-iraq-kurdishoil.html?_r=1&referrer= |
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| Xoybun | Jul 27 14, 10:18 Post #1614 |
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USA is trolling as usual. Yes, they will buy our oil. If Israel did all it's allies will buy. |
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| ALAN | Jul 28 14, 11:28 Post #1615 |
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Yup they bought our oil and now they say selling our oil is legal.... Pretty much they acted similar when Exxon entered SK... |
| Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time. | |
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| ALAN | Jul 28 14, 1:45 Post #1616 |
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US refrains to call Kurdish oil sale “illegal” The US State Department stated oil dispute between Erbil and Baghdad is a legal process and cannot call South Kurdistan’s oil sale illegal. Marie Harf, deputy spokesperson for the State Department, told reporters yesterday that the State Department does not necessarily deem sales of crude oil from South Kurdistan illegal, but “there’s a legal dispute process here, an arbitration mechanism. There will be a legal ruling on it.” She recommended the two sides to cooperate in this regard. The US official confirmed a tanker carrying Kurdish oil has arrives at a port in Florida. Harf went on to say that Iraqi people are the owners of the country’s oil and the two governments are needed to manage the state’s natural resources. The website Marine Traffic reported on Saturday that the United Kalavrvta was scheduled to arrive at Teakwood port in Florida at 8 p.m. GMT on Saturday. The website’s data also noted that the AIS reported destination was Galveston, Texas. Reuters reported that its AIS Live ship tracking showed the ship was bound for Galveston. Iraq’s Oil Ministry has threatened to sue anyone who purchases oil from the South Kurdistan after the KRG struck deals to sell crude oil via Turkey without first receiving Baghdad’s approval. http://www.kurdpress.com/En/NSite/FullStory/News/?Id=7917 |
| Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time. | |
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| ALAN | Jul 28 14, 1:50 Post #1617 |
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This is our clear path to total independence |
| Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time. | |
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| ALAN | Jul 28 14, 1:53 Post #1618 |
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Iraqi barking is very famous and they have gone overboard and mix parking with barking too... (Since they don't have P so they pronounce P as B)
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| Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time. | |
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| LelleS | Jul 29 14, 12:32 Post #1619 |
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UNITED KALAVRVTA on CNBC http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/55739720/#55739720 |
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| LelleS | Jul 29 14, 5:37 Post #1620 |
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Iraq fights to block Kurd oil from entering Texas http://www.cnbc.com/id/101872137 |
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| ALAN | Jul 29 14, 11:37 Post #1621 |
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Kurdistan MNR: "the oil that reached US shores have already been sold and the buyer will win because the Iraqi federal court ruled in MNR favor over legality of oil sales" http://www.radionawa.com/dreja.aspx?=hewal&jmare=17759&Jor=1 |
| Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time. | |
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| deso2409 | Jul 30 14, 1:08 Post #1622 |
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Acting on a request from the central government in Iraq, a U.S. judge has signed an order telling the U.S. Marshals Service to seize a cargo of oil from South Kurdistan aboard a tanker off the Texas coast — Reuters. any truth??? |
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| AlanJunior | Jul 30 14, 1:47 Post #1623 |
Liberal
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Yes it's true. Meanwhile PUK hosts Maliki and the party has no problem with him staying in power. Ahh PUK... words can no longer describe them.. |
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| kurdishpatriot | Jul 30 14, 3:23 Post #1624 |
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secular sheikh
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Baghdad welcomes US judge decision to seize Kurdish crude 29.07.2014 Hawar Abdulrazaq BasNews, Baghdad The Iraqi oil Ministry has welcomed a US judge’s decision to confiscate Kurdish oil tanker off the cost of Texas on Tuesday morning. The United Kalavrvta, carrying approximately 1 million barrels of crude and worth about $100 million, waited off Galveston Bay on Saturday but has yet to unload its controversial cargo. Baghdad is pleased with the move and has vowed to investigate other Kurdish oil tankers that were recently loaded in Ceyhan Port, Turkey, set to sell on the international market. “Iraqi oil Ministry has welcomed the decision of US court to seize the Kurdish oil tanker near Texas,” the Iraqi oil Ministry spokesman Asim Jihad told reporters in Baghdad on Tuesday. He also revealed that the decision has come as a result of recent efforts and requests from the Iraqi oil ministry to US government officials. “Our Ministry will try through legal procedures to investigate and follow all the other Kurdish oil tankers,” added Jihad. He also called on the international community to protect Iraq’s natural resources. On Monday the Iraqi government laid claim to the cargo, claiming it was sold by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) without Baghdad’s consent and that such actions amounted to “smuggling”. There has not been any immediate response from the KRG regarding the seizure of the Kurdish oil tanker by the US judge. According to Reuters, one cargo of Kurdish crude was delivered in Houston in May to an unidentified buyer, while four other cargoes were delivered this year to Israel. http://basnews.com/en/News/Details/Baghdad-welcomes-US-judge-decision-to-seize-Kurdish-crude/28570 Edited by kurdishpatriot, Jul 30 14, 3:25.
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#PROMOTEWOMENRIGHTS "shengal bo ezdi ya", Ezidi namerin, HATA ARAB NAMAYEN NEK SHENGAL! "A society can never be free without women's liberation" - Abdullah Ocalan | |
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| kurdishpatriot | Jul 30 14, 3:24 Post #1625 |
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secular sheikh
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sneeky iraqis, sneeky... |
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#PROMOTEWOMENRIGHTS "shengal bo ezdi ya", Ezidi namerin, HATA ARAB NAMAYEN NEK SHENGAL! "A society can never be free without women's liberation" - Abdullah Ocalan | |
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so far we havent had much issue from EU and other countries, US doesn't buy it but cant stop us selling it to other countries.





1:45 AM Jul 12