Abaq
VIP
While Madoobe and co sign laws easily giving Xamar more and more power, they don't understand they are signing their own death warrants. Iraqi Kurdistan which has been autonomous for nearly 30 years is on the brink of losing it's autonomy to the central government in Baghdad. How? The Iraqi government sued Turkey in an international court so the Turks stopped buying oil from Kurdistand. Now the Kurds can't sell their oil independently and have to go through Baghdad. Baghdad now funds the Kurds and they are beholden to the commands of the Iraqi government. A new law was passed in Baghdad that any Kurdish region that wants to get its funding directly from Baghdad bypassing Erbil can do so. Baghdad also controls all the entry and custom points in Kurdistan. In short, the Kurds have lost their autonomy.
This is the danger that faces Somalia. Although the State Presidents might give their signatures as just ink on paper, Xamar can and will use them in international courts to have them implemented, just like Baghdad did.
This is the danger that faces Somalia. Although the State Presidents might give their signatures as just ink on paper, Xamar can and will use them in international courts to have them implemented, just like Baghdad did.
The Kurds’ dreams of independence look farther off than ever
As the Kurds bicker, Iraq’s federal government is regaining control
For three decades Kurdistan boomed while the rest of Iraq sputtered. The region had the country’s fastest economic growth. It built modern oil complexes, hotels and motorways. With a vote in favour of independence in a referendum in 2017, its future looked bright. Six years on that dream has faded. The cranes that rotated above sprawling conurbations are parked over half-finished estates. And as Iraq’s capital, Baghdad, rebounds thanks to improved security and oil revenues, its rulers are chipping away at Kurdistan’s autonomy. After 30 years of self-government, the Kurds’ economy, borders, disputed territories and politics are largely back under central control. The Kurdish Regional Government (krg) is losing strength, says a Western diplomat monitoring developments from Baghdad: “There’s a risk that the Kurdistan project will fail.”
The Iraqi government in Baghdad is taking advantage of this rivalry to claw back the power it lost after the Kurds rose up against Iraq’s old dictator, Saddam Hussein, in 1991. It has started with money. Earlier this year the Supreme Court used an international arbitration ruling in Paris to outlaw Kurdish oil sales, stripping the Kurds of revenues they accrued from selling 450,000 barrels a day. Kurdish salaries now depend on the monthly allowance Baghdad pays the regional government.
The government in Baghdad is also taking control of the Kurds’ borders. It has stationed guards at the krg’s crossings and airports, in effect giving it a veto over who can get in and out. The Talabanis still pocket the revenues from the influx of cars and from cigarettes smuggled in from Iran—but not for much longer, says an Iraqi official. Turkey’s suspension of oil purchases from Iraq has also cost the Kurds the transit fees they used to earn from such transactions (an international court deemed that Turkey had been importing oil from the krg without Iraq’s consent and awarded Iraq around $1.5bn in compensation).
Most damaging, perhaps, is the Iraqi state’s reassertion of legal supremacy. In May its Supreme Court declared Kurdistan’s decision to postpone elections unconstitutional and ordered the replacement of the Kurdish electoral commission with Iraq’s.
Full article https://www.economist.com/middle-ea...ms-of-independence-look-farther-off-than-ever