Kadhimi Criticizes Iraq’s Sole Dependence on Iran for Electricity

Iraqi youths buy ice blocks at a factory in the Baghdad district of Sadr City. (AFP)
Iraqi youths buy ice blocks at a factory in the Baghdad district of Sadr City. (AFP)
TT

Kadhimi Criticizes Iraq’s Sole Dependence on Iran for Electricity

Iraqi youths buy ice blocks at a factory in the Baghdad district of Sadr City. (AFP)
Iraqi youths buy ice blocks at a factory in the Baghdad district of Sadr City. (AFP)

Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi defended his government’s efforts to find solutions to the deteriorating power crisis in the country.

During a meeting with the electricity emergency crisis cell on Saturday, the PM indirectly criticized Iraq’s dependence on Iran as a source of power.

He wondered why Iraq has not linked its electricity grids to other neighboring countries over the past 17 years, remarking that Tehran has its own people’s needs to address.

Moreover, he noted unpaid electricity bills and US sanctions against Iran, stressing that his government is determined to resolve this matter and pay Tehran is dues related to the import of gas and electricity.

The government issued a decision last year to connect Iraq’s electric grid with all neighboring countries, which will require time and patience, Kadhimi noted.

He wondered however, “who had decided to isolate Iraq and prevent it” from importing electricity from other countries.

The premier further slammed his political opponents who are trying to take advantage of the crisis for electoral purposes.
“You must continue to build,” he urged the gatherers, saying they “must disregard the electoral propaganda because political challenges do not make a state and do not provide electricity.”

“Let us all acknowledge that everyone has wronged the Iraqi people when they refused or hesitated to take a decision or failed in implementing it,” Kadhimi said.



UN Chief Calls the Death and Destruction in Gaza the Worst He’s Seen

 A general view of damaged buildings in Bureij, amid the Israel-Hamas conflict, near the Israel-Gaza border, as seen from Israel, September 9, 2024. (Reuters)
A general view of damaged buildings in Bureij, amid the Israel-Hamas conflict, near the Israel-Gaza border, as seen from Israel, September 9, 2024. (Reuters)
TT

UN Chief Calls the Death and Destruction in Gaza the Worst He’s Seen

 A general view of damaged buildings in Bureij, amid the Israel-Hamas conflict, near the Israel-Gaza border, as seen from Israel, September 9, 2024. (Reuters)
A general view of damaged buildings in Bureij, amid the Israel-Hamas conflict, near the Israel-Gaza border, as seen from Israel, September 9, 2024. (Reuters)

The UN chief said Monday that the United Nations has offered to monitor any ceasefire in Gaza and demanded an end to the worst death and destruction he has seen in his more than seven-year tenure.

Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in an interview with The Associated Press that it’s “unrealistic” to think the UN could play a role in Gaza’s future, either by administering the territory or providing a peacekeeping force, because Israel is unlikely to accept a UN role.

But he said “the UN will be available to support any ceasefire.” The United Nations has had a military monitoring mission in the Middle East, known as UNTSO, since 1948, and he said, “from our side, this was one of the hypotheses that we’ve put on the table.”

“Of course, we’ll be ready to do whatever the international community asked for us,” Guterres said. “The question is whether the parties would accept it, and in particular whether Israel would accept it.”

Israel’s military assault on Gaza, triggered by Hamas' attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, has stretched for 11 months, with recent ceasefire talks failing to reach a breakthrough and violence in the West Bank reaching new highs.

Stressing the urgency of a ceasefire now, Guterres said: “The level of suffering we are witnessing in Gaza is unprecedented in my mandate as secretary-general of the United Nations. I’ve never seen such a level of death and destruction as we are seeing in Gaza in the last few months.”

The war has killed over 40,900 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not differentiate between fighters and civilians in its count. The war has caused vast destruction and displaced around 90% of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million, often multiple times.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his government have accused the UN of being anti-Israel and have been highly critical of UN humanitarian operations in Gaza.

Facing protests at home and increasing urgency from allies, Netanyahu has pushed back against pressure for a ceasefire deal and declared that “no one will preach to me.”

Looking beyond a ceasefire, Guterres stressed that a two-state solution to the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict is not only viable, “it’s the only solution.”

The United States and others support Palestinian statehood, but Netanyahu, who is leading the most conservative government in Israel’s history, has opposed calls for a two-state solution.

Guterres asked rhetorically whether the alternative is viable.

“It means that you have 5 million Palestinians living there without any rights in a state,” he said. “Is it possible? Can we accept an idea similar to what we had in South Africa in the past?"

He was referring to South Africa’s apartheid system from 1948 until the early 1990s when its minority white population marginalized and segregated people of color, especially Black people.

“I do not think you can have two peoples living together if they are not in a basis of equality, and if they are not in a basis of respect — mutual respect of their rights,” Guterres said. “So the two-state solution is, in my opinion, a must if we want to have peace in the Middle East.”