“The two parties will form a committee of seven members; five of them from Baghdad and two Kurdish others. It will review all the disputes between both sides,” the newspaper quoted the source as saying on Wednesday.
“The committee will also tackle all political and economic issues as well as the airports and borders issue. I expect it to yield a solution for the crisis soon,” the source added.
The remarks came amid contradicting news that Erbil approved handing over the border crossings and airports to the federal government, which are demands that the government considered as condition for negotiations, Iraqi news reported.
Meanwhile, Renas Jano, spokesperson for the Kurdistan Democratic Party, said the crisis between Baghdad and Erbil is likely to be resolved soon, in case the government showed flexibility.
Kurdistan, according to Jano, “expressed wishes to facilitate the issues including the handover of border crossings, on condition that this happens in a civil not military way.”
On Tuesday, Safeen Dizayee, a spokesperson of the Kurdish government, expressed refusal of handing over the border management to the federal government, saying that the law states joint administration.
Reporter’s code: 50101
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