Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Shahristani: the joint committees between Baghdad and Erbil will discuss three files

   

Shahristani: the joint committees between Baghdad and Erbil will discuss three files

   


19/06/2013 12:00 AM

Include the disputed areas, security and oil
Baghdad, Tariq al-Araji,
revealed Deputy Prime Minister for Energy Affairs Hussein al-Shahristani close consultations between Baghdad and Erbil on three files. According to al-Shahristani, these files are: "the disputed areas, and security issues, and oil and gas."
He said in a statement singled out the "Center Brief for the Iraqi Media Network": "The Council of Ministers meeting in Arbil was a regular, not exceptional, being an Iraqi city, similar to other cities, as it deliberately Council to hold meetings in Mosul, Basra and Erbil, and there were no formal meetings between the Council of Ministers and the Kurdish side. was the Council of Ministers held recently, meeting in Arbil, in a move described by observers as "positive," especially after the meeting fruitful cooperation between Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and President of Kurdistan, Massoud Barzani, who agreed to nominate joint committees.
Shahristani said that the meeting of the Council of Ministers was relates to its agenda, and the meeting between the prime minister and the president of the region resulted in the launch of the work of the joint committees between the two sides to engage in dialogue, noting that the committee did not start work until now, as it was supposed to be up committees formed from Erbil to Baghdad to meet each with its counterpart on the disputed areas and security issues, oil and gas.
part, Oil Minister Abdul Karim and coffee in a statement singled out the "Center Brief for the Iraqi Media Network": that the joint committees between the central government and the Kurdistan region on the subject of oil and gas has not met yet.
added to coffee that "the provincial government does not still refrain from handing the center of the oil produced there amounting to 250 thousand barrels per day. "

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