
Hussein Yazdanpanah, Leader of Separatist Kurdistan Freedom Party, Urges Kurdish Youth to Attack Iranian Regime Targets, Avenge 'Kurdistan's Martyrs'
In a June 15, 2025 video posted on PAKenglish on X, Hussein Yazdanpanah, leader of the Iraq-based separatist Kurdistan Freedom Party (PAK), urged Kurds in occupied Kurdistan to end the killing of Kurdish children 'on the borders, in the streets, and in the prisons.' He called on the youth of Kurdistan, both inside and outside Iran, to attack the enemy, its centers, and its facilities, and to avenge the blood of Kurdistan's martyrs. According to the post, Yazdanpanah declared that now is the time to bring down the regime, and he urged Kurdish youth to seize IRGC and intelligence bases in their areas, avenging the death of Jina (Mahsa) Amini in September 2022 - which sparked the Women, Life, Freedom protests - and the blood of fallen PAK Peshmerga fighters.
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Shafaq News
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Kurdish lawmaker: Salary crisis nearing resolution as Baghdad–Erbil deal advances
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Rudaw Net
4 hours ago
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Kurdish, Iraqi forces eliminate ‘three terrorist' in Kirkuk
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Rudaw Net
5 hours ago
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Erbil, Baghdad edge toward oil export deal despite oil volume dispute: Sources
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The KRG delegation, led by Kamal Mohammed, acting natural resources minister, met with federal officials to to iron out the details 'The [latest] talks were held in a calmer environment, breaking past tensions, and there has been progress on the oil issue,' a senior Baghdad source told Rudaw. Oil exports through the Iraq-Turkey pipeline have been halted since March 2023, following a ruling by a Paris-based arbitration court which found that Turkey violated a 1973 pipeline agreement by allowing Erbil to export oil independently. On Wednesday, Kurdistan Region Prime Minister Masrour Barzani said the halt in exports had cost the Region over $25 billion in lost revenues. In February, the Iraqi parliament amended the federal budget law, including a provision for a $16-per-barrel fee to cover production and transportation costs for international oil companies (IOCs) operating in the Kurdistan Region. 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A SOMO official, speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the talks, told Rudaw on Sunday, 'The meetings are ongoing,' while noting that 'the matter is complex and significant. It is not just a SOMO issue - it involves Iraq as a whole and the [federal] oil ministry. SOMO is only the implementer." Iraq's 2023–2025 federal budget law, passed in June 2023, allocates 12.6 percent of the national budget to the Kurdistan Region - on the condition that it delivers 400,000 bpd. Tensions between Erbil and Baghdad escalated in late May when the federal finance ministry halted all transfers to the KRG, claiming that it exceeded its 12.67 percent share of the 2025 budget. The freeze has suspended salary payments for over 1.2 million KRG public employees, drawing strong criticism from Kurdish political parties, who say the move is unconstitutional. The move effectively suspended salaries for over 1.2 public sector employees in the Region and sparked sharp condemnation from Kurdish parties, who argue the suspension is politically motivated and unconstitutional. Sources in both Erbil and Baghdad underlined to Rudaw on Sunday that reaching a final agreement on oil volumes is essential to resume salary payments. Unpaid debts and scrutinizing revenues Beyond export volumes, another major obstacle is the financial entitlements and outstanding debts owed to IOCs. A KRG source told Rudaw that these companies are seeking two guarantees: a fixed payment of $16 per barrel fee to cover production and transportation costs, as stipulated in the budget law, and the repayment of nearly $1 billion of accumulated debts the IOCs say they are owed. Meanwhile, Baghdad is seeking greater oversight of the KRG's non-oil revenues. In a letter sent in late May, Iraqi Finance Minister Taif Sami cited the KRG's failure to remit its full share of revenues as justification for withholding budget transfers. During their visit to Erbil on Thursday, Baghdad's technical delegations proposed sending federal teams to monitor KRG-controlled revenue sources, such as customs and border crossings, to verify income in coordination with federal authorities. This demand aligns with Iraq's Federal Financial Management Law No. 6 of 2019, which mandates that 50 percent of federal customs and tax revenues be distributed to provinces - including the Kurdistan Region - with the remaining 50 percent going to the federal government. Hevidar Shaaban, a financial advisor based in Erbil, noted to Rudaw on Sunday that both the KRG and the federal government representatives have reportedly reached a preliminary agreement on three main points: the KRG committing to transfer 50 percent of its non-oil revenues to the federal government, customs operations will be integrated with federal systems, and in return, the federal government will be obliged to resume salary payments to KRG employees. Hastyar Qadir contributed to this article.