affairs.
In recent months Karim and the provincial council have pushed back on Baghdad’s appointment of a new dean for the University of Kirkuk and a new head of the NOC, while Baghdad is trying to prevent the governor from removing the Kirkuk head of intelligence from the federal interior ministry.
Fiscal decentralisation of Kirkuk is another point of dissent between Baghdad and the province. Kirkuk is owed over $1.37bn for 2014 and 2015 regional development funds and ‘petrodollar’ royalties that the Iraqi federal government budgets for oil-producing provinces. Of the $1.57bn, the province has only received $197m in the last two years. In the first half of 2015, only $12m has arrived to support projects in a province with 1.5 million inhabitants and a staggering 600,000 displaced persons.
But the KRG hasn’t stepped up: Kirkuk has not been paid ‘petrodollars’ by the KRG on any Kirkuk oil that it exported – either with Kirkuk’s approval or without.
The controversial subject of KRG independence could represent a fifth and final conflict in which Kirkuk will play a critical role. In the midst of the Kurdish region’s crisis over presidential powers, the main Kurdish parties disagree over what role Kirkuk might play in future voting and referendums: Should Kurds from Kirkuk vote in KRG presidential elections, potentially benefitting the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK)? When should Kirkuk be asked if it wants to accede to the KRG - again, potentially tipping the balance towards the PUK and away from the Kurdistan Democratic Party? Or would a narrow referendum result to join the KRG inflame ethnic tensions in Kirkuk for decades to come?
The key trend visible is that outsiders use Kirkuk for their own benefits, but the devastating results are felt most deeply by the Kirkukis.
One of the signature successes of the governorate, a local job-creation programme, is being starved to death because tiny increments of money, around $2m a month, are withheld by Baghdad for no apparent reason. Even when Haider al-Abbadi, the prime minister of Iraq, personally orders this money to be sent, it still does not arrive.
This article has been excerpted from: ‘Kirkuk may be key to national reconciliation in Iraq’.
Courtesy: Aljazeera.com