facility:mediterranean port of ceyhan

  • Who’s Buying ISIS’ Oil? | Alternet
    By Vijay Prashad / CounterPunch
    December 10, 2015
    http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/whos-buying-isis-oil

    On December 2, Russia’s Deputy Minister of Defense Anatoly Antonov made a strong statement about Turkish complicity with ISIS. The charge sheet is long and detailed. It mentions many aspects, but the most incendiary is the accusation about “ISIS oil.”

    ISIS controls Iraqi oil fields near Mosul. They have been making millions of dollars each day by selling oil from these fields. How does ISIS get the oil from the fields in Mosul to the market?

    What ISIS has done is to use the old networks that have smuggled oil from the Kurdish Regional Government without any consideration given to Baghdad’s sovereignty over that oil. This had been a point of contention for decades, since the Kurdish region began to exercise autonomous control of the north. Kurdish oil was sold to smugglers who would cart them in tankers across the border into Turkey. In Turkey the trucks would run the length of the country to the Mediterranean port of Ceyhan. From Ceyhan, which is a port run by the Turkish government, the oil is purchased by transporters whose ships go to Malta, where the oil is transshipped to destinations such as Ashdod (Israel). This has long been a bone of contention between the Iraqi government, the Kurdish Regional Government and the Turkish government. It was documented by Tolga Tanış in his book Potus ve Beyefendi (2015). Tanis accuses Berat Albayrak, son-in-law of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, of involvement in this illegal scheme. ISIS has merely replaced the Kurdish Regional Government in the new arrangement.

    #Pétrole #EI #ISIS

  • Attacks render #Iraq-Turkey #Oil pipeline unusable: minister
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/attacks-render-iraq-turkey-oil-pipeline-unusable-minister

    An oil pipeline carrying crude from Iraq’s Kirkuk oil fields to #turkey's Mediterranean port of Ceyhan is unusable because of persistent militant attacks, Turkey’s energy minister said on Monday. “Of course this is a loss for Iraq,” Taner Yildiz told reporters, referring to the Baghdad-controlled pipeline, which has been pumping way below its 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) of capacity. (Reuters)

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