Iraq oil cities see more violence

Published: Nov. 8, 2007 at 4:59 PM
Order reprints
BASRA, Iraq, Nov. 8 (UPI) -- A new round of violence in and around Iraq’s two oil capitals, Basra and Kirkuk, highlights the threat of internal discord, not external threats.

Around 11 billion of Iraq’s 115 billion barrels of Iraq’s proven oil reserves are in the Kirkuk area; 80 percent of the reserves are in and around Basra.

Tensions are mounting in Kirkuk as the city, which is claimed by Kurds as historically theirs, faces a controversial referendum. Voters in it and other disputed territories are to decide whether to join the Kurdistan Regional Government’s jurisdiction.

Iraq’s Sunni Arabs are the leading opponents of this.

In Basra, the area is controlled by Iraqi Shiites. Exactly which group will rule the area is not decided by election so much as it is decided by militias affiliated with political and religious groups.

McClatchy Newspapers reports 13 people were injured Thursday when a suicide bomber attacked the Kirkuk headquarters of the Kurdistan Democratic Party. The KDP is one of two major Kurdish parties that run the KRG and make up the ruling coalition in Baghdad.

In Basra, the head of education’s motorcade was hit by an improvised explosive device, though he was not traveling in the caravan, and a roadside bomb injured four of the Basra police chief and commander of Basra's operation center’s caravan.


© 2007 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Jockstrip: The world as we know it. (22 min)
Your Daily Horoscope
The almanac
Panetta: Congress not told of CIA program
Biden goes on the road to defend stimulus
The two-edged sword of online games
Rio Tinto employees face spy charges
fark
Over a 30-day period, U.S. Marshalls arrested over 35k figitives netting 2,356 sex-offenders, 433...
Tennessee Aquarium presents a bowl full of ugly-ass baby penguin. A little milk and we'll have a...
Judge allows Twitter-using DA to 'tweet' upcoming muder trial over defense objections. Prosecution's...
Photoshop theme: The end of the universe
NY Times thinks their website users would pay five bucks per month. Listen, for the last time, no...
Fewer calories allow monkeys to live longer. Good thing you're not a monkey