Baghdad ups financial support for Iraqi Kurdistan

A general view of Kurdish MPs sitting during a session of Kurdistan's regional parliament in Arbil, the capital of the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 18 September 2023
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Baghdad ups financial support for Iraqi Kurdistan

  • Iraqi Kurdistan has long accused Baghdad of not sending the necessary funds to pay civil servants

BAGHDAD: The federal government in Baghdad on Sunday agreed to increase funds allocated to Iraqi Kurdistan that are desperately needed to pay salaries in the northern autonomous region.
The decision came after thousands of people took to the streets of Dohuk, the third-biggest city in the region, in early September over unpaid civil service salaries which they blamed on Baghdad.
On Sunday the federal government said in a statement it would disburse annually to Iraqi Kurdistan two trillion and one hundred billion dinars to be paid in three equal instalments of 700 billion dinars (more than $530 million).

I thank our compatriots for their patience, their determination and their unshakable trust in the government.

Masrour Barzani

The funds will be loaned by three state-banks and reimbursed by the finance ministry in Baghdad, the statement said.
This mechanism aims to “cover employee salaries, social welfare recipients, and retirees,” it added, and the funds will be available from September.
Authorities in Baghdad and in Kurdistan have a month to “conduct an audit of the employee, social welfare recipient, and retiree numbers in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq,” it said.
Iraqi Kurdistan has long accused Baghdad of not sending the necessary funds to pay civil servants.
Previously the region, thanks to its oil exports, had independent funding that partly covered salaries.
Since the end of March it has been deprived of this resource because of a dispute with Baghdad and Turkiye, through which oil was exported.
In principle, Iraqi Kurdistan and Baghdad later agreed that sales of Kurdish oil would pass through the federal government. In exchange, 12.6 percent of the federal budget is allocated to Iraqi Kurdistan.
Earlier this month, Baghdad unblocked a package of 500 billion dinars (about $380 million) for the region’s salaries, but the government of Iraqi Kurdistan said it was not enough.
Masrour Barzani, the region’s prime minister, welcomed Sunday’s decision, calling it a “fruitful agreement” to “cover (civil servant) salaries.”
“I thank our compatriots for their patience, their determination and their unshakable trust in the government,” Barzani said in a statement.
He also telephoned Iraqi Prime Minister Mohamed Shia Al-Sudani to thank him for his “support.”

 


Kosovo president Osmani congratulates Syria on Liberation Day

Updated 14 sec ago
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Kosovo president Osmani congratulates Syria on Liberation Day

  • ‘This is a day that symbolizes not only freedom regained, but also the rebirth of a people’s hope’

RIYADH: Kosovan President Vjosa Osmani has sent her congratulations to the Syrian people as Syria celebrated Liberation Day marking a year since the overthrow of Bashar Assad.

“Happy Liberation Day to all the people of Syria. It is with profound honor that I address you today on behalf of the people and the institutions of the Republic of Kosovo, as you mark this historic first anniversary of your liberation,” the Kosovan leader said in a video posted on her social media account.

“This is a day that symbolizes not only freedom regained, but also the rebirth of a people’s hope.”

“Both our countries, Kosovo and Syria, have known the darkest chapters of oppression, injustice, and unimaginable suffering. But we have also known what it means to rise, to transform pain into purpose and strength. We have stood firm in our belief that no force can extinguish a people’s yearning for freedom,” Osmani added.

Syria formally recognized Kosovo as an independent and sovereign state in October during a trilateral meeting in Riyadh hosted by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman with Syrian president Ahmed Al-Sharaa and Kosovo’s Osmani.

Osmani described Syria’s recognition of Kosovo as a “historic event,” and expressed her appreciation to the crown prince for facilitating the meeting between the two nations.

“We have learned that justice, though delayed, always finds a voice. For the people of Kosovo, freedom was earned through so much sacrifice and courage. And we know that the same spirit defines the people of Syria, who have endured so much, yet never surrendered their faith in a better tomorrow,” Osmani said in her video greeting to the Syrian people.

“Dear friends in Syria, please know that Kosovo stands with you. We will be your partner, your friend, and your ally every step of the way. From Pristina to Damascus, our hearts beat as one for freedom, for dignity, and for the enduring friendship between our two countries. Happy Liberation Day.”