DNO International ASA: DNO International reports a working interest production of 23,478 bopd in June 2010

DNO’s working interest production increased from 11,431 bopd in May to 23,477 bopd in
June. On a quarterly basis, the working interest production increased from 12,442 bopd
in the first quarter to 15,748 in the second quarter.

The strong increase in June was related to short term sales arrangements for crude oil
deliveries to the local market in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq (Kurdistan).

“The Company expects to maintain the June level of crude oil deliveries in Kurdistan
also for July, but the August production is likely to be lower due to Ramadan. As the
current production volumes in Kurdistan are based on short term delivery arrangements,
the local sales in Kurdistan may continue to show significant fluctuations going
forward”, says Helge Eide, Managing Director of DNO International ASA.

Complete production report is attached.

Oslo, 27 July 2010

DNO International ASA

Corporate Communications

This information is subject of the disclosure requirements acc. to §5-12 vphl (Norwegian
Securities Trading Act)

HUG#1434117

DNO International ASA – Production Report for June 2010

http://hugin.info/36/R/1434117/379789.pdf

Turkish jets bomb PKK in north Iraq-Iraq official

Iraq, July 10 (Reuters) – Turkish warplanes on Saturday bombed targets believed to belong to the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in northern Iraq, an Iraqi official said.

One civilian was wounded in the remote village of Sidakan in the Hakurk region near the borders with Turkey and Iran, Mayor Ahmed Qader said.

The bombing could not be immediately confirmed with the Turkish military.

Witnesses in the Turkish city of Diyarbakir said they heard military planes take off at about 2 a.m. (2300 GMT).

Turkey has conducted aerial raids on PKK sites in recent weeks after the rebels called off a 14-month one-sided truce on June 1 and stepped up attacks on army targets.

Separately, two PKK fighters were killed in the Turkish province of Van late on Friday after they refused to surrender to security forces, officials said on condition of anonymity.

The PKK took up arms against Turkey in 1984 in a bid for an independent Kurdish homeland. They have since scaled back their demands to greater political and cultural rights for Turkey’s estimated 14 million Kurds. More than 40,000 people, mainly guerrilla fighters, have died in the conflict.

Most PKK fighters are based in northern Iraq, which is run by the autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG). The central government in Baghdad and the KRG have both protested the bombings are a violation of Iraqi sovereignty. (Reporting by Shamal Aqrawi in Arbil and Seyhmus Cakan in Diyarbakir; writing by Ayla Jean Yackley; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Three Turkish soldiers killed in PKK attack – TV

July 6 (Reuters) – Kurdish guerrillas killed three Turkish soldiers and wounded three in an attack on a military outpost in southeast Turkey overnight, broadcaster CNN Turk reported on Tuesday.

It said the attack by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) guerrillas occurred in the Semdinli district of Hakkari province, near the border with Iraq.

Officials were not immediately available for comment on the report.

The PKK has stepped up attacks against the military in southeast Turkey after ending a 14-month ceasefire at the start of June.

More than 40,000 people have been killed in a conflict that began in 1984 when the PKK took up arms against the state with the aim of creating a separate Kurdish homeland. (Reporting by Daren Butler)

Kurdish rebels kill four Turkish security forces

Turkey, July 1 (Reuters) – Four members of the Turkish security forces were killed in a firefight with Kurdish guerrillas in southeastern Turkey late on Wednesday, security officials said.

The clash broke out near the town of Pervari in Siirt province in the mainly Kurdish southeast, the officials said on condition of anonymity. A lieutenant and three village guards who work for the military were killed, they said.

Military operations that included helicopter gunships against the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) guerrillas were continuing.

The outlawed PKK has stepped up attacks on Turkish military targets after calling off its one-year truce on June 1, accusing Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan’s government of failing to find a political resolution to the 26-year conflict.

The PKK took up arms against Turkey in 1984 in a bid to carve out an independent Kurdish state, and more than 40,000 people, mainly Kurds, have died in the war.

Violence traditionally rises in the southeast, which borders Iraq where most of the PKK is based, in the spring and summer months as warmer weather allows the rebels and the army to move more easily through the region’s mountainous terrain. (Writing by Ayla Jean Yackley; editing by Noah Barkin)

DNO International ASA: DNO reports a working interest production of 11,431 bopd and a net entitlement production of 6,891 bopd for May 2010

“Production in May was somewhat lower than in April, mainly due to lower local sales in
Kurdistan. The variations in these sales are due to local demand factors. Based on the
current deliveries we expect local sales in Kurdistan to increase for the month of
June”, says Managing Director Helge Eide.

DNO’s net entitlement production in May was 6,891 bopd.

See attached report for more information.

Oslo, 22 June 2010

DNO International ASA
Corporate Communications

This information is subject of the disclosure requirements acc. to §5-12 vphl (Norwegian
Securities Trading Act)

HUG#1425766

Blast near Istanbul army complex kills 3 – TV

June 22 (Reuters) – An explosion in Istanbul near a bus carrying military personnel killed at least three people on Tuesday, Turkish media reported.

The blast occurred close to a military housing complex, television broadcaster CNN Turk and other TV stations said.

It came a day after Turkish military forces began a major deployment of troops and elite forces along the border with Iraq, as fighting intensified between Turkish military forces and militants of the illegal Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

PKK guerrillas killed 11 soldiers at the weekend and one soldier was killed late on Monday. (Reporting by Thomas Grove; Editing by Charles Dick)

One Turkish soldier killed in PKK attack

June 20 (Reuters) – One Turkish soldier was killed and one injured in a Kurdish rebel attack on a military outpost in the southeastern province of Elazig overnight, military sources said on Sunday.

The attack followed clashes on Saturday which killed 11 soldiers and 12 Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) guerrillas in the region, near the border with Iraq. The attacks marked an escalation in separatist violence in the region.

The sources said the militants threw a hand grenade at the base before opening fire with rifles in the Palu district of Elazig.

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan was due to attend a ceremony in the southeastern city of Van on Sunday for the soldiers killed in Saturday’s clashes.

The PKK, branded terrorists by Turkey, the United States and the European Union, said this month they had scrapped a year-old unilateral ceasefire and resumed attacks against Turkish forces because of military operations against them.

More than 40,000 people have been killed in the conflict since the PKK launched its insurgency in 1984 with the aim of creating an ethnic homeland in the country’s southeast. (Writing by Daren Butler)

Vast Exploration Inc.-Drilling Update on Exploration Well in Kurdistan Region-Iraq

CALGARY, ALBERTA, Jun 14 (MARKET WIRE) —
Vast Exploration Inc. (“Vast” or the “Company”) (TSX
VENTURE: VST) is pleased to provide the following progress update on the
Qara Dagh – 1 Exploration Well, Qara Dagh Block, in the Kurdistan Region
of Iraq.

The Qara Dagh Well was spudded on 12 May 2010 with a planned TD of
3600-4000 meters. Following the setting of 20″ surface casing at 686
meters, an 8-1/2″ pilot hole is currently being drilled down to the
13-3/8″ intermediate casing point. The decision to drill a pilot
hole was based on the expected fracture nature of the shallow geological
formations, and the ability to better control the drilling in a smaller
size hole.

Currently the well is drilling ahead at approximately 1,300 meters
through the top boundary of the Cretaceous age formations. The Company
believes there could be up to three potential reservoirs in the
Cretaceous with the Shiranish formation being the uppermost perspective
reservoir. During the past several days, drilling gas shows have been
observed, which is an encouraging indication of hydrocarbons being
present in the well bore.

The well plan is to drill through the Shiranish formation and upon
positive indications an open hole DST test will be planned. Then the plan
is to continue drilling to evaluate the prospectivity of the Kometan and
Qamchuqa horizons in the Cretaceous. Drilling is expected to take an
additional three months to complete and will target up to seven potential
reservoirs in the Cretaceous, Jurassic and Triassic formations.

Mr. Ahmed Said, President and CEO, stated, “We are very pleased with
the operational progress to date. The drilling program is ahead of our
projected estimates, and we are looking forward to entering into the
primary zones of interest that are below current depths.”

Regulatory Statements

This press release contains “forward looking information”
within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities legislation. Forward
looking information includes, but is not limited to, statements with
respect to the estimated resource assessment, the prospective nature of
the Block, exploration and development plans and projected expenses,
receipt of government approvals, and relationships with other companies
who hold an interest in the Qara Dagh block. Generally, forward looking
information can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology
such as “plans”, “expects” or “does not
expect”, “is expected”, “budget”,
“scheduled”, “estimates”, “forecasts”,
“intends”, “anticipates” or “does not
anticipate”, or “believes”, or variations of such words
and phrases or state that certain actions, events or results
“may”, “could”, “would”, “might”
or “will be taken”, “occur” or “be
achieved”. Resource estimates are based on assumptions and
parameters agreed upon, and considered reasonable, by the management of
the Company, AJM and the other companies with interests in the Block.
Statements regarding timetable of future exploration of the Block are
based on the plans set by the companies with interests in the Blocks.
Forward-looking information is subject to known and unknown risks,
uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results, level
of activity, performance or achievements of the Company to be materially
different from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking
information. For a description of some of such risks, please see the
Company’s annual information form filed under the profile of the Company
on SEDAR. Although the Company has attempted to identify important
factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those
contained in forward-looking information, there may be other factors that
cause results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended. There can
be no assurance that such information will prove to be accurate, as
actual results and future events could differ materially from those
anticipated in such statements. Accordingly, readers should not place
undue reliance on forward looking information. The Company does not
undertake to update any forward-looking information, except in accordance
with applicable securities laws.

NEITHER THE TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE NOR ITS REGULATION SERVICES PROVIDER (AS
THAT TERM IS DEFINED IN THE POLICIES OF THE TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE) ACCEPTS
RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ADEQUACY OR ACCURACY OF THIS RELEASE.

Contacts:
Vast Exploration Inc.
Ahmed Said
President and CEO
+1 (403) 263 3000
+1 (403) 263 3041 (FAX)
asaid@forbesenergygroup.com

Vast Exploration Inc.
Greg Cameron
Vice President, Corporate Development
+1 (416) 277 6174
+1 (403) 263 3041 (FAX)
gcameron@forbesmanhattan.com
www.vastexploration.com

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

-0-

Blast wounds 11 soldiers in eastern Turkey

Turkey, June 11 (Reuters) – A roadside bomb attack by Kurdish separatist militants wounded 11 Turkish soldiers travelling a convoy in eastern Turkey, military officials said on Friday.

Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants detonated the explosives by remote control in the mountainous Tunceli province on the road south to Elazig, the offcials said. One of the wounded soldiers was in a serious condition.

Military units have launched an operation in the area to track down the rebels.

PKK fighters regularly carry out such attacks on military vehicles in the mainly Kurdish southeast of the country. Clashes with the military have escalated in recent weeks with the onset of warmer weather in the mountainous region.

The PKK took up arms against the state in 1984 with the aim of creating an ethnic homeland in the region. More than 40,000 people have died in the conflict. (Writing by Daren Butler; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Turkish military helicopter crashes, all onboard dead

June 10 (Reuters) – All four Turkish armed forces personnel on board a military helicopter were killed when it crashed on Thursday in central Turkey, broadcaster CNN Turk said.

Industrials

The crash occurred in foggy weather, Serif Yilmaz, governor of Tokat province, told the channel in comments that were aired live. The helicopter caught fire on impact, he said.

Yilmaz said the reason for the crash was unknown but that there was no indication it was attacked.

Kurdish separatists and left-wing guerrillas carry out attacks on Turkish military targets. Some 40,000 have been killed in violence since 1984, when the Kurdistan Workers Party took up arms against the Turkish military. (Editing by Matthew Jones)

DNO International ASA: DNO International ASA – Delayed final award with regards to arbitration proceedings

As previously reported to the market, DNO Iraq AS, a subsidiary of DNO International
ASA, is involved in arbitration proceedings related to certain third party interests in
Kurdistan.

Based on our best time estimate when releasing the first quarter results, DNO
International communicated a possible conclusion in this matter by the end of May 2010.
At present, no final award has been reached and no new information is received.

DNO International will publish updated information regarding the arbitration proceedings
as soon as such information is available.

Oslo, 8 June 2010

DNO International ASA
Corporate Communications

This information is subject of the disclosure requirements acc. to §5-12 vphl (Norwegian
Securities Trading Act)

Iraq’s divided vote may deepen Kirkuk dispute

A dispute between Kurds and Arabs over Iraq’s oil producing city of Kirkuk may deepen after a strong election challenge by Iyad Allawi’s Arab nationalist Iraqiya to the Kurdish ruling bloc.

Preliminary results from the March 7 parliamentary election show strong Sunni Arab and Turkmen support has pushed the secularist Iraqiya list led by Shi’ite former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi slightly ahead of the powerful Kurdish alliance.

Kurds claim Kirkuk as their ancestral homeland and want to wrap it into their largely autonomous Kurdistan region in northern Iraq. The idea is rejected by the city’s Arab and Turkmen residents as well as the central government in Baghdad.

The vote in Kirkuk, where Allawi’s secular list was ahead by about 3,000 votes, could weaken the longstanding Kurdish claim and spark new tension as Iraq is trying to shake off years of violence and rebuild its battered economy.

“It is a blow to Kurdish morale,” IHS Global Insight Middle East analyst Gala Riani said. “The Kirkuk dispute will inevitably deepen with time and as it becomes more pressing to resolve the issue. Basically, the closer push comes to shove, the more intense we can expect the dispute to become.”

Iraq’s Arabs and Kurds are locked in a long-running dispute over land, oil and the constitutional shape of the federation. The row is seen as a chief threat to Iraq’s fragile security and young democracy.

Kirkuk sits atop one of Iraq’s key oil producing fields. The Kirkuk fields contain about 13 percent of Iraq’s proven reserves, which in turn are the world’s third largest.

The feud has destabilised some areas in Iraq, including the violent city of Mosul, the capital of the northern Nineveh province, and allowed al Qaeda insurgents to gain a foothold.

“The results of the parliamentary election will lead to a big change in Kirkuk’s political map due to the emergence of new powers in the scene such as the Arabs and Turkmen,” political analyst Abdul-Karim al-Khalifa said.

Kurds flatly reject a compromise with Baghdad on Kirkuk despite the election results and say that Allawi’s list is the one more likely to fracture.

The Kurdish alliance, which includes Iraqi President Jalal Talabani’s Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and Kurdish President Masoud Barzani’s Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), is ahead across the largely autonomous Kurdistan region.

But the alliance is facing an unprecedented challenge from the Kurdish reform-minded Goran group, which was threatening to split Iraq’s Kurdish establishment.

When it comes to Kirkuk, however, it is more likely that the alliance and Goran will form a united Kurdish front to wrest concessions from Baghdad on the ethnically divided city.

“Whatever the results of the election are, we as Kurds will not give away the Kurdish identity for the city of Kirkuk,” Adnan Kirkouki, a candidate with the Kurdish alliance, said.

“The Kurdish alliance will remain united, despite the difference in opinion between the various parties. All of them agree on the Kurdish identity of the city.”

PRE-NUPS AND COALITIONS

Allawi and Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki are in a neck-and-neck election race nationwide with no one expected to get an outright majority, meaning that both will be forced to seek political alliances to form a government.

“To some extent this should set the stage for the coalition negotiations,” said analyst Reidar Visser of www.historiae.org. “With such a good result for Allawi in Kirkuk it makes no sense for him to give too many concessions to the Kurds and the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (ISCI), the most pro-Kurdish Shi’ite party.”

Kurds, who see themselves as kingmakers in forming a new government, are asking for written assurances from potential coalition partners on revenue sharing and disputed territories, Kurdish sources say.

The future of Mosul, which lies close to territory disputed by the Arab majority and minority ethnic Kurds, is another thorny issue in the relationship between Baghdad and Kurdistan.

Allawi, who won over minority Sunni Arabs with his non-sectarian message, led in five provinces, including Kirkuk and Nineveh, sweeping western and northern areas that are home to large numbers of Sunnis. Maliki led in seven provinces in central and southern Iraq, six of them mainly Shi’ite.

A win by Allawi is likely to intensify Kurdish demands for the control of Kirkuk even more and could aggravate territorial disputes in Nineveh, said Wayne White, a scholar at the Middle East Institute.

Kurds made substantial inroads in Nineveh in a 2005 election after Sunnis largely stayed away from the poll. But friction worsened after voting last year put control of the provincial council in the hands of Arab nationalists.

The KRG is also at loggerheads with Baghdad over the legality of contracts the KRG signed independently with foreign oil firms, a dispute that resulted in the halting of oil exports from Kurdistan last year.

“During the bitter manoeuvring over who will become the next prime minister, Maliki — or another competitor — might reach out to the Kurds in an effort to form a kingmaking coalition,” White said. “Should that happen, Baghdad’s position on Kurdish territorial claims could shift somewhat.”

Iraq’s Maliki risks Sunni ire if he shuns Allawi

(Reuters) – Iraq’s Shi’ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki may get first go at forming a government, early election results show, but Sunnis will fume if he cuts out his secular rival Iyad Allawi, the man most of them voted for.

World

The March 7 vote for a 325-seat parliament has reshaped a fractured Iraqi political landscape which is likely to undergo further shifts in tough coalition bargaining that lies ahead.

Maliki’s State of Law coalition leads in seven of Iraq’s 18 provinces, with Allawi’s Iraqiya list ahead in five. The Iraqi National Alliance (INA), dominated by Shi’ite Islamist factions, and a Kurdish alliance are each in front in three provinces.

The Kurdish alliance was slightly behind Iraqiya in the disputed city of Kirkuk, while Goran, a Kurdish reform movement, eroded its hegemony in the autonomous northern Kurdistan region.

The overall picture is incomplete, with results released so far representing just over a quarter of 12 million votes cast, and may change, particularly in Baghdad and Kirkuk.

But politicians hoping to govern Iraq as U.S. troops prepare to leave are already jostling for possible coalition partners.

Maliki’s potential allies include INA, led by the Shi’ite Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (ISCI), and the Kurdish parties, as well as Iraqiya. But these groups might join forces to thwart his return to power. Rival blocs may dissolve and re-form.

“It’s going to be another wild ride to see which way it goes,” said David Newton, a former U.S. envoy to Iraq. “Iraqis seem to be able to solve things at 10 minutes after midnight.”

He said Sunnis would take it very badly if Maliki moved toward ISCI — viewed by many of them as a proxy of Iran. They favor Allawi, a secular Shi’ite who led a transitional 2004-05 government and who looks poised to be a major player again.

Yahya al-Kubaisy, a researcher at the Iraq Institute for Strategic Studies, said a government excluding Iraqiya risked fuelling resentment felt by the Sunni minority since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion ended its entrenched grip on power.

“If this happens, we must expect a return of violence to Iraq,” he said.

A bloody Sunni insurgency against U.S. and Iraqi troops only calmed after local tribes turned against al Qaeda Islamists, joining forces with a ramped-up U.S. military presence.

Maliki based his re-election campaign partly on improved security after the sectarian carnage of 2006-07, and on plans for reconstruction to be funded from oil deals his government signed with foreign firms to unlock Iraq’s vast energy wealth.

RESONANT MESSAGE

His message struck a chord with many voters in Baghdad despite a series of deadly bombings by al Qaeda-linked militants that has hit government targets in the capital since August.

“Maliki is doing fantastically well in Baghdad and most places south of it, but dismally in (Sunni-dominated areas) to the north of the Iraqi capital,” said Iraq expert Reidar Visser.

Iraq could wind up with a prime minister whose party had won only one or two percent of the vote in the Sunni heartland of Anbar and the volatile northern province of Mosul, he said.

“Allawi is doing better in Shi’ite areas than Maliki is doing in Sunni areas, but he may get a smaller total number of deputies and will therefore need more coalition partners to form a government,” Visser argued.

He said Maliki’s support for a pre-election move to bar hundreds of candidates for alleged links to Saddam Hussein’s now outlawed Baath party had alienated many Sunnis. “The de-Baathification campaign has clearly reduced his ability to rise above sectarianism and act as a national leader.”

Toby Dodge, an Iraq expert at Queen Mary, University of London, predicted that Maliki would rely on Shi’ite support in his quest for a coalition that could keep him in power, rather than on some form of cross-sectarian nationalism.

“Given his behavior during the campaign, I would bet on sectarianism and some form of alliance with all or elements of INA,” Dodge said, referring to Maliki’s Shi’ite former allies.

Maliki far outpolled INA in the southern oil city of Basra, where he sent troops to combat Shi’ite militia in 2008.

Aqil Abdul Hussein, a Basra University professor, said the results so far were predictable. “They reflect the feelings of Basra residents, who have taken note of progress and security improvements over the past two years.”

The vote in Kirkuk, where Allawi’s list edged ahead, could damage the longstanding Kurdish claim that the oil city belongs to Kurdistan — although the Kurds are sure to try to use coalition bargaining to wrest concessions on the issue.

Iraqi President Jalal Talabani’s Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and Kurdish President Masoud Barzani’s Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) faced an unprecedented challenge to their hold on the Kurdish vote from the reform-minded Goran group.

Khaled Suleiman, an analyst in northern Iraq, said the Kurds would speak with one voice in Baghdad, despite the rise of Goran, “especially on issues related to Kurdish destiny such as recovering Kirkuk and the issue of Peshmerga (Kurdish forces).”

He said the Kurds would again play kingmakers in Iraqi national politics. “No government can be formed without Kurds.”

(Additional reporting by the Baghdad bureau; editing by Robin Pomeroy)

Analysts view: Early results from Iraq’s election

(Reuters) – Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki’s State of Law coalition pulled ahead in early results released from Iraq’s March 7 national polls.

World

Maliki’s bloc is trailed by former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi’s Iraqiya list, a cross-sectarian, secularist group that fared well in Sunni areas, and the Iraqi National Alliance (INA), a rival to Maliki for the Shi’ite vote that is dominated by the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (ISCI).

The vote remains fragmented, and no single bloc is expected to win a majority, which suggests a long and fractious road to forming a government lies ahead.

In northern Iraq, the ruling Kurdish alliance dominated largely autonomous Kurdistan and was running slightly behind in the disputed city of Kirkuk. But Goran, a Kurdish reform movement, was eating away at the alliance’s hegemony.

Below are initial assessments from Iraqi and foreign analysts on what the initial results mean for Iraq.

TOBY DODGE, ANALYST, QUEEN MARY, UNIVERSITY OF LONDON

“It now appears to be all about the coalition. If Maliki is strong enough to build the group that can keep him in power and if so, on what ideological basis; sectarianism or some form on nationalism?

“Given his behavior during the campaign, I would bet on sectarianism and some form of alliance with all or elements of the Iraqi National Alliance (INA).”

WAYNE WHITE, SCHOLAR AT THE MIDDLE EAST INSTITUTE

“A sizeable Allawi win in the north and west could generate even more robust efforts to disqualify him and others running on the Iraqiya slate following the election.

“Although the margin is very slim at present with around a third of the votes still to be tallied, an Iraqiya win in Kirkuk, probably would trigger much greater tension there as Kurds press even harder to have the city placed under Kurdish domination once and for all.

“A very narrow triumph on the part of either Iraqiya or the Kurds in Kirkuk almost certainly would spawn a wave of fraud accusations on the part of the losers.”

REIDAR VISSER, IRAQ EXPERT, WWW.HISTORAE.ORG

“Maliki’s lead is convincing in Baghdad and areas to the south, but he is not performing well at all in the Sunni-dominated areas north of Baghdad. Iraq could end up with a situation where the party of the prime minister only has 1-2 percent in key areas like Anbar and Mosul.

“The de-Baathification campaign has clearly reduced his ability to rise above sectarianism and act as a national leader. Allawi is doing better in Shi’ite areas than Maliki is doing in Sunni areas, but the problem is that he may get a smaller total number of deputies and therefore will need more coalition partners to form a government.”

DAVID MACK, FORMER U.S. AMBASSADOR AND SCHOLAR AT THE MIDDLE

EAST INSTITUTE

“If Maliki does in fact get the plurality of the vote, he will need coalition partners to form a government, and he will need a cross-sectarian coalition to form a government that will have a good chance of bringing long-term stability to Iraq.”

AQIL ABDUL HUSSEIN, PROFESSOR AT BASRA UNIVERSITY

“The results (in Basra, where Maliki has a large lead) were to a large extent predictable. They reflect the feelings of Basra residents, who have taken note of progress and security improvements over the past two years.

“I believe this election, and even quarrelling over the results, is a healthy experience and a step forward for Iraq’s democratic experience.”

DAVID NEWTON, FORMER U.S. AMBASSADOR TO IRAQ

“It probably means that (Maliki) gets first shot at forming a government. It remains to be seen which direction he will go. If he goes toward (ISCI) it will be taken very badly by the Sunnis.

“I think it’s going to be another wild ride to see which way it goes. Iraqis seem to be able to solve things at 10 minutes after midnight after giving us quite a ride along the way.”

KHALED SULEIMAN, POLITICAL ANALYST IN NORTHERN IRAQ

“The victory of the Kurdish alliance over Goran and the opposition parties was an expected result.

“It’s hoped that in coming days Kurds will close ranks especially on issues related to Kurdish destiny such as recovering Kirkuk and the issue of Peshmerga (Kurdish forces).

“Kurds will have political weight. No government can be formed without Kurds. They are the fundamental part of Iraqi politics.”

(Reporting by Aref Mohammed in Basra, Sherko Raouf in Sulaimaniya, Shamal Aqrawi in Arbil, Jim Loney in Baghdad; compiled by Missy Ryan; Editing by Samia Nakhoul)

Iraq’s Maliki sees coalition with Shi’ite rivals

BAGHDAD (Reuters) – Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki acknowledged on Sunday that he would probably need partners to gain a majority after the election on March 7, and said he was ready to join with Kurdish or other Shi’ite groups.

World

“Alliances in forming the coming government are a must,” he said in remarks carried by the state-owned National Media Center.

“Coalition with the Iraqi National Alliance (INA) and the Kurdish coalition is an important issue in building the country. These blocs enjoy historical relations that the political process and national unity need.”

Maliki’s comments were the clearest signal yet that his State of Law coalition hopes to join forces with rival blocs after the polls.

They might also constitute an acknowledgement that his own support may be less than anticipated — although few political experts expected any single electoral bloc to form a majority on its own in a society as fractured as Iraq’s.

Maliki, who has gathered strength and popularity since being selected as a relatively obscure compromise candidate in 2006, did well in provincial polls in early 2009, but his law-and-order message has taken a hit after a series of bomb attacks in Baghdad.

His current government is an alliance of majority Shi’ites with Kurds and Sunnis. After his strong performance in 2009, Maliki decided his ostensibly non-sectarian State of Law alliance would run against the other main Shi’ite groups.

Wheeling and dealing after next Sunday’s election could mean it takes weeks or even months to form the next government.

The INA is Maliki’s main rival for the Shi’ite vote, while the Kurdish coalition is dominated by the two parties that control Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdistan region: the Kurdistan Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan.

Kurds are seen as kingmakers in the polls, as their support could give any bloc decisive weight in forming a government.

The polls may mark a watershed for Iraq as it struggles to end seven years of violence since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled dictator Saddam Hussein. But they could also renew political feuds that have fueled greater violence in the past.

Maliki’s broad-based alliance includes members of his Dawa party, a party founded in the 1950s to give Shi’ite Islam greater power in public life, and other groups including some Sunni tribal leaders, Shi’ite Kurds, Christians and independents.

‘US Not At War With Islam’ Obama Tells Turkey

President Obama addresses Turkey's parliament in Ankara

President Obama addresses Turkey's parliament in Ankara

The US president is trying to mend fences with a Muslim world that felt it had been blamed by America for the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Speaking in Muslim-dominated Turkey, President Obama acknowledged that relations between the US and the Muslim world have been strained.

“Let me say this as clearly as I can: the United States is not at war with Islam,” he said.

He insisted the partnership between America and the Muslim world is critical in rolling back what he called a fringe ideology rejected by people of all faiths.

Mr Obama said while the two countries may face different enemies, the US and Turkey share a “common threat” from terrorism. As America and Iraq are targeted by al Qaeda terrorists, Turkey has been dealing with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), President Obama explained.

The PKK fights for self-rule in part of Turkey, launching attacks from hideouts in Iraq and Mr Obama has promised US support against those assaults.

And he said both the US and Turkey have an interest in making sure al Qaeda does not have a safe haven in Pakistan or Afghanistan.

Bilateral ties were strained when Turkey denied US troops permission to use its territory in the 2003 invasion of Iraq ordered by the President George W Bush.

But Mr Obama said: “We have seen steady improvement in US-Turkish relations”, thanking Turkey for offering to help train and support Afghan troops.

Iranian bombing kills child, injures parents in northern Iraq

Iranian bombing kills child, injures parents in northern Iraq Baghdad – Iranian artillery fire Tuesday night killed a two- year-old child and injured his parents in a northern Iraqi village near the Iranian border, Iraqi radio reported Wednesday.

Iranian forces fired artillery rounds for two hours into the village near Zarawa, a police official told the Voices of Iraq (VOI) news agency. Zarawa is more than 500 kilometres north of Baghdad.

The child’s mother is in a stable condition, but the father’s health is critical, the official added.

Northern Kurdish villages in Iraq are routinely exposed to Turkish air bombings and Iranian artillery targeting the Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK) and the Party For a Free Life in Kurdistan, which oppose the Turkish and Iranian regimes. (dpa)

Turkish investigators find bones in “death wells”

Istanbul – Turkish investigators have found bones, potentially the remains of victims of illegal executions, as part of a major search of a group of wells in south-eastern Turkey, newspapers reported Tuesday.

The search has opened up a group of so-called “death wells” where a secret unit within the Turkish police force is believed to have thrown the corpses of “disappeared” militants from the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

Work began on Monday on unsealing the wells, and bones, plus the underwear of a man, have been found.

The bone samples have now been taken away for analysis at a laboratory. Nurisevan Elci, the prosecutor in the regional capital Sirnak Silopi who ordered the search at three separate sites, said “we do not know whether the bones are human or animal.”

The area has seen scores of politically-motivated killings and disappearances in the long-running clash between the Turkish state and Kurdish separatists.

The existence of a secret unit within the Turkish forces has never been officially acknowledged. The media in Ankara has linked it to the ultra-secret secular nationalist Ergenekon group, which has faced numerous arrests and police raids for allegedly plotting against the mildly-Islamist conservative government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip. (dpa)

King Tut’s statue found in northern Iraq

Baghdad, Feb 13 (ANI): A Kurdish archaeological expedition has found a small statue of the ancient Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamen in northern Iraq.

Hassan Ahmed, the director of the local antiquities authority, told the Kurdish news agency Akanews that archaeologists had found a 12-centimeter statue of the ancient Egyptian king in the valley of Dahuk, 470 kilometers north of Baghdad, near a site that locals have long called Pharaoh’s Castle.

He said that archaeologists from the Dahuk Antiquities Authority believe the statue dates from the mid-14th Century BC.

According to Ahmed, the statue of Tutankhamen showed ‘the face of the ancient civilization of Kurdistan and cast light on the ancient relations between pharaonic Egypt and the state of Mitanni.’

The kingdom of Mittani occupied roughly the same territory spanning Syria, Iraq, Turkey, and Iran in the 14th Century BC that many Kurds now hope will one day form an independent Kurdistan.

“Historical information indicates familial and political ties between Mittani and Egypt,” Ahmed said.

“The discovery of this statue shows us that the name of Pharaoh’s Castle, was not invented out of vacuum, but rather arose out of historical fact,” Ahmed told Akanews.

“This calls for strengthening archaeological research ties between the territory of Kurdistan and the Arab Republic of Egypt,” he added. (ANI)