KRG PM demands Kadhimi hold Erbil rocket attack perpetrators accountable
ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Prime Minister Masrour Barzani is demanding that his Iraqi counterpart hold the perpetrators of the Wednesday rocket attacks near Erbil international Airport accountable.
“I have spoken to PM Mustafa al-Kadhimi on the importance of holding the perpetrators accountable,” Barzani tweeted late Wednesday about a phone call with Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi.
“I strongly condemn tonight’s rocket attack in Erbil. The KRG will not tolerate any attempt to undermine Kurdistan’s stability and our response will be robust,” Barzani added.
At least four rockets landed in the vicinity of Gazna village, northeast of Erbil, near the Kurdistan Region capital's airport. A fire has broken out in an open field at the scene of the explosions.
The Kurdistan Regional Government's (KRG) Directorate General of Counter Terrorism (CTD) says that six rockets were launched toward Erbil International Airport from Sheikh Amir village in Nineveh province by Hashd al-Shaabi militants, but did not reach the airport, according to a statement from the body.
"Two of the rockets did not explode and fortunately they did not cause any casualties," reads the statement.
The KRG's interior ministry said in a statement late Wednesday that six rockets were launched between Sheikh Amir and Tarjla villages in Bartella.
"This area is controlled by Hashd al-Shaabi's 30th Brigade. Our special teams are seriously investigating in order to obtain more information."
Gazna is the site of a Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (KDPI) base, a Kurdish opposition group to Tehran. A senior KDPI official told Rudaw English that his group has not sustained any casualties. The group later tweeted officially confirming that a rocket landed near their headquarters.
An order has been issued to detain the head of the security unit responsible for Hamdaniya district in Nineveh province, where the rockets were launched from, according to an Iraqi Joint Operations Command statement published on Telegram, describing the attackers as members of a "terrorist group."
A US official says Coalition forces, who are located at Erbil International Airport, were alerted to the explosion and told to take cover. The C-RAM missile defence system did not activate, and there is no damage to the airport, added the official.
Ahmed Hoshyar Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Erbil International Airport confirms the explosions did not take place inside the airport compound.
Operation Inherent Resolve Spokesman Col. Wayne Marotto tweeted late Wednesday that the attacks did not hit Coalition forces.
The KRG interior ministry strongly condemned the "cowardly terrorist attack," saying they are prepared to respond.
"We call on the federal government to take necessary action," added the statement.
Iraq’s Hashd al-Shaabi, also known as the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), is a predominantly Shiite paramilitary network, was created in 2014 following a fatwa, or religious call to action, from Sistani, in response to the Islamic State (ISIS) insurgency.
International targets have been a site of frequent bombardment by rogue armed groups in central and southern Iraq, but recent attacks had not reached the Kurdistan Region until Wednesday.
Washington has signaled it could close its diplomatic mission in Baghdad if measures are not taken to put a stop to the attacks.
Douglas Ollivant, the director for Iraq at the National Security Council during both the Bush and Obama administrations, told Rudaw in interview that "there are two messages sent by this attack: one to Washington and one to Erbil. They are mostly the same, but are slightly different."
He claims that the message to the US is that their forces "anywhere in Iraq are subject to these attacks", while the message for Erbil is that "any idea that Erbil has about becoming a sanctuary for the United States inside Iraq ... should not be considered."
“I have spoken to PM Mustafa al-Kadhimi on the importance of holding the perpetrators accountable,” Barzani tweeted late Wednesday about a phone call with Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi.
“I strongly condemn tonight’s rocket attack in Erbil. The KRG will not tolerate any attempt to undermine Kurdistan’s stability and our response will be robust,” Barzani added.
At least four rockets landed in the vicinity of Gazna village, northeast of Erbil, near the Kurdistan Region capital's airport. A fire has broken out in an open field at the scene of the explosions.
The Kurdistan Regional Government's (KRG) Directorate General of Counter Terrorism (CTD) says that six rockets were launched toward Erbil International Airport from Sheikh Amir village in Nineveh province by Hashd al-Shaabi militants, but did not reach the airport, according to a statement from the body.
"Two of the rockets did not explode and fortunately they did not cause any casualties," reads the statement.
The KRG's interior ministry said in a statement late Wednesday that six rockets were launched between Sheikh Amir and Tarjla villages in Bartella.
"This area is controlled by Hashd al-Shaabi's 30th Brigade. Our special teams are seriously investigating in order to obtain more information."
Gazna is the site of a Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (KDPI) base, a Kurdish opposition group to Tehran. A senior KDPI official told Rudaw English that his group has not sustained any casualties. The group later tweeted officially confirming that a rocket landed near their headquarters.
An order has been issued to detain the head of the security unit responsible for Hamdaniya district in Nineveh province, where the rockets were launched from, according to an Iraqi Joint Operations Command statement published on Telegram, describing the attackers as members of a "terrorist group."
A US official says Coalition forces, who are located at Erbil International Airport, were alerted to the explosion and told to take cover. The C-RAM missile defence system did not activate, and there is no damage to the airport, added the official.
Ahmed Hoshyar Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Erbil International Airport confirms the explosions did not take place inside the airport compound.
Operation Inherent Resolve Spokesman Col. Wayne Marotto tweeted late Wednesday that the attacks did not hit Coalition forces.
The KRG interior ministry strongly condemned the "cowardly terrorist attack," saying they are prepared to respond.
"We call on the federal government to take necessary action," added the statement.
Iraq’s Hashd al-Shaabi, also known as the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), is a predominantly Shiite paramilitary network, was created in 2014 following a fatwa, or religious call to action, from Sistani, in response to the Islamic State (ISIS) insurgency.
International targets have been a site of frequent bombardment by rogue armed groups in central and southern Iraq, but recent attacks had not reached the Kurdistan Region until Wednesday.
Washington has signaled it could close its diplomatic mission in Baghdad if measures are not taken to put a stop to the attacks.
Douglas Ollivant, the director for Iraq at the National Security Council during both the Bush and Obama administrations, told Rudaw in interview that "there are two messages sent by this attack: one to Washington and one to Erbil. They are mostly the same, but are slightly different."
He claims that the message to the US is that their forces "anywhere in Iraq are subject to these attacks", while the message for Erbil is that "any idea that Erbil has about becoming a sanctuary for the United States inside Iraq ... should not be considered."