After approving the budget amendment, Shakhwan Abdullah announces containing the problem of Kurdistan oil and employees’ salaries

After approving the budget amendment, Shakhwan Abdullah announces containing the problem of Kurdistan oil and employees’ salaries

2025-02-02 05:27

After approving the budget amendment Shakhwan Abdullah announces containing the problem of Kurdistan oil and employees salariesShafaq News/ The Deputy Speaker of the Iraqi Parliament, Shakhwan Abdullah, announced on Sunday that the problems facing the export of oil from the Kurdistan Region have been contained, after passing the amendment to the federal budget law.

Abdullah said in an interview with a number of journalists, including a Shafaq News Agency correspondent, that the budget amendment came after everyone reached this conclusion, and now there are no problems facing oil exports.

He added, “Accordingly, oil will be exported from the Kurdistan Region in the future, and our goal is to contain the problem of employees’ salaries.”

Abdullah expressed his thanks to all the blocs, with their various names, that voted in favor of the budget bill to resume the export of oil from the Kurdistan Region, considering it “an important step to reconnect the region to global markets.”

Abdullah also said, “The decision to sell oil through SOMO removed all excuses for the federal government not to send the budget.”

He added: “Despite some problems occurring during the session, everyone eventually reached a conviction to pass this project, because any amendment would have taken us back to square one, especially since this project involves three parties: the regional government, the federal government, and the oil companies.”

Abdullah stressed that “there is no longer any obstacle to resuming oil exports,” explaining that the project addresses issues related to oil revenues and the return of benefits to the Iraqi government and the Kurdistan Region, and also contributes to resolving disputes related to the region’s salaries and oil delivery.

The agreement came after a series of meetings between the Kurdistan delegation and the Iraqi government, the last of which was last Friday.

The issue of salaries of Kurdistan employees tops the list of disputes between Baghdad and the region, especially after the decision of the Iraqi Federal Court last year obligating both the Prime Minister of the Federal Council and the President of the Kurdistan Regional Government to localize the salaries of employees and workers in the public sector in federal banks.

Baghdad confirmed its commitment to the decision, but stipulated the submission of lists of employees’ names, while the regional Ministry of Finance considered that “ambiguity surrounds how to deal with the list.”

The Kurdistan Region has been witnessing a financial crisis and a liquidity shortage since losing its most important financial resources due to the halt of oil exports to Turkey via the Ceyhan Port pipeline after Ankara’s decision to stop the flow of crude following an international arbitration ruling requiring it to pay compensation to Baghdad for the damages it suffered.

In turn, the federal government faces the challenge of securing employees’ salaries due to the budget deficit rising to more than 64 trillion Iraqi dinars, while the size of the domestic debt reaches about 14.5 percent of the gross domestic product, according to official data.

shafaq.com