KDP leader slams Al-Sulaymaniyah protests as "politicized": Take your demands to Baghdad

Shafaq News
/ Hoshyar Zebari, a senior leader of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP),
criticized recent protests at one of Erbil's main entrances as
"politicized."
Posting on
X, Zebari remarked that the sit-in movement organized in Al-Sulaymaniyah is
highly politicized, suggesting that demonstrators would be more effective if
they relocated their protests to key public spaces in Baghdad—such as Tahrir
Square or Imam Al-Qasim Street—in order to demand the timely payment of their
financial entitlements. He also noted that the Regional Government has resolved
the salary issue with Baghdad.
Meanwhile,
dozens of individuals from Al-Sulaymaniyah gathered at the Dikala checkpoint
between Erbil and Al-Sulaymaniyah, intending to enter Erbil to protest delayed
salary payments. A hunger strike, now in its 13th day, along with other
demonstrations in Al-Sulaymaniyah, has persisted amid ongoing delays in salary
payments and rising living costs, intensifying calls for urgent government
action from both the Iraqi and Kurdish authorities.
The protests
occur amid a severe salary crisis in the Kurdistan Region, where unpaid public
sector wages for December 2024 and January 2025 have sparked widespread unrest.
The dispute stems from ongoing political tensions between the Regional
Government in Erbil and the federal government in Baghdad, centering on
disagreements over oil revenue sharing. While Baghdad insists that the KRG must
transfer all oil production to the State Organization for Marketing of Oil
(SOMO), funneling revenues into the national treasury to fund salaries and
production costs, Erbil contends that it should deduct production costs before
remitting the remaining funds.