Log in

View Full Version : Attacks all but stop flow of Iraqi oil



bunk
30th August 2004, 16:44
BAGHDAD - Oil exports from southern Iraq have been brought to a complete halt, a senior oil official said today, following a spate of pipeline attacks launched by insurgents trying to undermine the volatile nation's interim government.

In Baghdad, military officials and representatives of rebel Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr held talks Sunday aimed at reducing violence in the restive Baghdad slum of Sadr City. Clashes there killed 10 people on Saturday, officials said.

Oil flows out of the southern pipelines — which account for 90 per cent of Iraq's exports — ceased late Sunday and were not likely to resume for at least a week, an official from South Oil Co. said on condition of anonymity.

"Oil exports from the port of Basra have completely stopped since last night," the official said today.

A halt in southern oil exports costs Iraq about $60 million (U.S.) a day in lost income at current global crude prices, said Walid Khadduri, an oil expert who is chief editor of the Cyprus-based Middle East Economic Survey.

Insurgents have launched repeated attacks on Iraq's oil infrastructure in a bid to undermine the interim government and reconstruction efforts.

The latest strikes against five pipelines linked to the southern Rumeila oil fields immediately shut down the Zubayr 1 pumping station, forcing officials to use reserves from storage tanks to keep exports flowing for several hours. The reserves ran out late Sunday, the South Oil Co. official said.

Before Sunday's attack, Iraq's exports from the south were about 600,000 barrels a day — a third of the normal average of 1.8 million barrels a day due to a separate string of attacks early last week. The pipelines were still ablaze today, the official said.

Saboteurs last brought southern oil exports to a halt in June.

In Baghdad, insurgents fired three mortar rounds into an eastern neighbourhood early today but there were no immediate reports of casualties, Interior Ministry spokesperson Col. Adnan Abdul-Rahman.

North of the capital, unidentified gunmen shot and seriously wounded a woman working as a translator for the U.S. military in the city, her husband, Amer Abdul-Karim said.

Sunday's talks in Sadr City failed to bring a peace agreement, with al-Sadr's aides demanding a U.S. pullout from the neighbourhood, a condition U.S. officials rejected.

British forces in the southern city of Basra, also the site of recent fighting, held similar talks Sunday with al-Sadr officials there.

Both areas had erupted in violence after U.S. forces and al-Sadr's militants began fighting in the holy city of Najaf three weeks ago, and the talks Sunday appeared to be an effort by both sides to expand on the peace deal that ended the Najaf crisis Friday.

U.S. forces and al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia have been fighting for weeks in Sadr city, the east Baghdad slum named for the rebel cleric's father. Though peace descended on Najaf on Friday, skirmishes continued Saturday in Baghdad, with militants firing mortars and automatic weapons at U.S. troops and tanks in the impoverished neighbourhood.

In response, al-Sadr representatives, tribal leaders, Shiite politicians, government officials and U.S. military officers met to discuss the violence.

The head of the tribal negotiating team, Naim al-Bakhati, told reporters that all sides — including al-Sadr representatives — had agreed that damaged areas there be rebuilt, U.S. troops withdraw from the area except for their normal patrols and that Iraqi police be allowed to enter the slum.

But "there was no agreement on the Mahdi Army handing over their weapons," al-Bakhati said.

Sadr City police chief Col. Maarouf Moussa Omran said all sides agreed to observe a one-day truce until this morning to give the Iraqi government time to discuss the results of the meeting.

But Lt.-Col. Jim Hutton, a spokesperson for the U.S. Army's 1st Cavalry Division, said "there has been no agreement of any kind," adding that the talks were not negotiations.