"Iran has no role in the Kirkuk operation,” Velayati told reporters on the
sidelines of his meeting with Special Envoy of France to Syria Franck Gellet in
Tehran on Tuesday.
He further pointed to the independence referendum recently held in Iraq’s
semi-autonomous Kurdistan Region and said the majority of Iraq’s Kurdish people
are opposed to the ambitions of Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) President
Masoud Barzani.
"We saw that the region (Kirkuk) was captured by the Baghdad government almost
without any clashes,” said Velayati, who is also an international adviser to the
Leader of the Islamic Revolution.
Iraqi forces completed an operation to take control of all oil fields operated
by state-owned North Oil Company in the Kirkuk region on Tuesday, according to a
senior military officer.
They took control of the Bai Hasan and Avana oil fields northwest of Kirkuk on
Tuesday, after seizing the Baba Gurgur, Jambur and Khabbaz fields on Monday, he
said, Reuters reported.
Oil officials in Baghdad said all the fields were operating normally.
The fields were previously held by Kurdish Peshmerga forces, but they pulled out
of the area in the face of an advance by forces of the Iraqi central government.
Tuesday’s deployment of Iraqi government forces in Dibis, where Bai Hasan and
Avana are located, is part of an operation ordered by Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi
to take control of Kurdish-held areas outside the three provinces that form
Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region.
The latest incidents come amid simmering tensions between the central government
in Baghdad and the KRG over a recent controversial referendum on the secession
of the semi-autonomous Iraqi Kurdish region.
The plebiscite took place on September 25, sparking strong objection from
Baghdad. Iraq’s neighbors and the international community also voiced concerns
about the repercussions of the vote, which was only supported by Israel.
Kirkuk, with some 10 percent of Iraq’s oil reserves, has long been contested by
Baghdad and Erbil.
Source:Tasnim