Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06KIRKUK138
2006-08-15 11:17:00
CONFIDENTIAL
REO Kirkuk
Cable title:  

(C) KIRKUK ROAD CONSTRUCTION HEADING NORTH

Tags:  PGOV PHUM PINR PINS PNAT PREF ECON EIND ELTN 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO0627
PP RUEHBC RUEHDE RUEHIHL
DE RUEHKUK #0138/01 2271117
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P R 151117Z AUG 06
FM REO KIRKUK
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 0708
RUEHGB/AMEMBASSY BAGHDAD PRIORITY 0670
INFO RUCNRAQ/IRAQ COLLECTIVE
RUEHKUK/REO KIRKUK 0736
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 KIRKUK 000138 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

BAGHDAD FOR POL, POLMIL, NCT, IRMO

E.O. 12958: DECL: 8/15/2016
TAGS: PGOV PHUM PINR PINS PNAT PREF ECON EIND ELTN
KDEM, IZ
SUBJECT: (C) KIRKUK ROAD CONSTRUCTION HEADING NORTH

KIRKUK 00000138 001.2 OF 002


CLASSIFIED BY: Jim Bigus, PRT Leader, POL, Department of State.
REASON: 1.4 (b),(d)



C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 KIRKUK 000138

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

BAGHDAD FOR POL, POLMIL, NCT, IRMO

E.O. 12958: DECL: 8/15/2016
TAGS: PGOV PHUM PINR PINS PNAT PREF ECON EIND ELTN
KDEM, IZ
SUBJECT: (C) KIRKUK ROAD CONSTRUCTION HEADING NORTH

KIRKUK 00000138 001.2 OF 002


CLASSIFIED BY: Jim Bigus, PRT Leader, POL, Department of State.
REASON: 1.4 (b),(d)




1. (C) INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY: Kirkuk Provincial Council
(KPC) member and Director of Roads and Bridges, Qasim Hamza,
said on August 1 that poor security in southern Kirkuk was
diverting road reconstruction projects to safer areas north of
the city. He said that badly needed road and bridge
construction in Hewija and its sub-districts had been halted due
to security concerns. Hamza said his department was not
responsible for internal roadwork in Kirkuk city and that this
fell under municipal authority. His office was responsible for
highways and bridges passing through Kirkuk Province and
currently focused its efforts on linking Kirkuk with Chamchamal,
Sulaymaniyah, and Erbil. Hamza claimed the Kurdistan Regional
Government did not fund road construction in Kirkuk Province,
and that private Iraqi contractors accomplished all road
construction in the area. END INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY.

(C) POOR SECURITY MAIN OBSTACLE TO PROGRESS
--------------


2. (C) KPC member and Kirkuk Director of Roads and Bridges,
Qasim Hamza, told IPAO on August 1, 2006, that deteriorating
security in the southern areas of Kirkuk Province had pushed
reconstruction activities north of the city. He claimed poor
security had halted construction on Hewija roads and that 9
billion Iraqi Dinar (ID) were set aside for much needed road
reconstruction in the Hewija sub-districts of Zab and the Daquq
sub-district of Rashad, but engineers and companies refused to
go there due to security concerns. He added that smugglers and

terrorists were using two kilometers of unpaved road between
Kirkuk and Hewija because security vehicles had difficulty
traversing these bad roads. Hamza said a major bridge project
in Hewija that would permit traffic flow to circumnavigate the
Kirkuk city had to be put on hold indefinitely because the
security situation made the project impossible.

(C) NO MATERIALS, NO SEWAGE SYSTEM, NO SKILLED LABOR
-------------- --------------

3. (C) Hamza said looters stole all of the equipment from the
Kirkuk Directorate of Roads and Bridges after Operation Iraqi
Freedom (OIF). He said as a result they had no bulldozers or
other building equipment for projects and had to work through
contractors. Before OIF, Hamza said, Kirkuk had its own asphalt
factory; now the city had to bring asphalt from the Baiji and
Dora refineries that frequently suffered sabotage attacks, and
that this in turn affected construction projects in Kirkuk. He
added that Kirkuk had no sewer and drainage system currently,
and that this contributed significantly to surface degradation
and to problems with paving and leveling roads. Hamza said his
office had to depend on outside contractors for skilled labor
because it had no in-house engineers, designers, or surveyors to
outline urgently needed projects. He claimed current projects
inside the city included reconstruction and paving of the
northern Tabaqchi and Rahimawa bridges, and the Domiz bridge in
southern Kirkuk city.

(C) FUNDING AND PRIORITIES HEAD NORTH
--------------


4. (C) Hamza said for 2006 the KPC had delegated one-fourth of
the total provincial budget, 33 billion ID, to improve municipal
services in the city of Kirkuk, while the local budget for Roads
and Bridges was set at 9 billion ID, with an additional 60
billion ID from the Project Contracting Office in Baghdad for
highway construction. There were several highway projects
underway currently, Hamza said, to link Kirkuk cities to the
Kurdish areas. For instance, he cited work on the Erbil
Roadway, stretching from Hamrin Mountain in southern Kirkuk
Province to Alton Kopri, north of Kirkuk city. He also cited
work on the Sulaymaniyah Roadway, from Hamrin Mountain through
Kirkuk to Chamchamal. He said the Directorate of Roads and
Bridges also was working on the road from Dahuk to Tuz Khurmatu.
Hamza said his office had a plan for construction work from
Kirkuk to Baghdad, but that this was slated for next year.

(C) BIOGRAPHIC NOTES
--------------


5. (C) Qasim Hamza Ahmed al-Bayati: Current Director of
Kirkuk Roads and Bridges (appointed in March, 2006); born in the
mostly Turkoman neighborhood of Tissin in Kirkuk, 1959; member
of the Turkoman Loyal (Wafa) Movement (TLM) party, founded in
exile in 1977; Qasim occupies the KPC seat the TLM won in the
January, 2005, elections as part of the Iraqi Turkoman Front
bloc ticket; received a degree in Heritage Reconstruction and is

KIRKUK 00000138 002.2 OF 002


a practicing civil engineer.

(U) COMMENT
--------------


6. (C) Post has noticed local leaders increasingly have cited
poor security in southern Kirkuk as the primary reason these
areas have not received adequate reconstruction to date. It is
worth noting that Hamza, as a Turkoman and a member of the Iraqi
Turkoman Front bloc, did not cite alleged Kurdish efforts to use
road construction to strengthen Kirkuk's links to the KRG.
Rather, Hamza appeared very supportive of any reconstruction
projects in Kirkuk and sought to accomplish these wherever
possible, in his case the safer northern areas. This lends
credibility to the notion that poor security is a genuine
concern among all ethnic communities in Kirkuk, but is
nevertheless working to the Kurds' advantage by permitting them
to create political facts on the ground.
JBIGUS