(Reuters) - Acting on a request from the central government in Iraq,
a U.S. judge has signed an order telling the U.S. Marshals Service to
seize a cargo of oil from Iraqi Kurdistan aboard a tanker off the Texas
coast, court filings showed on Tuesday. The United Kalavrvta
tanker, carrying some 1 million barrels of crude worth about $100
million, arrived near Galveston Bay on Saturday but has yet to unload
its disputed cargo. The ship, which is too large to enter ports near
Houston and dock, was given clearance by the U.S. Coast Guard on Sunday
to transfer its cargo offshore to smaller boats that would deliver it to
the U.S. mainland. But
Iraq's central government, in a court filing on Monday, laid claim to
the cargo that it says was sold by the regional government of Kurdistan
without permission from Baghdad, which has said such deals amount to
smuggling. To carry out
the order from Magistrate Judge Nancy K. Johnson of the U.S. District
Court for the Southern District of Texas, the Marshals Service may need
to rely on companies that provide crude offloading services. The judge's order said the vessel would be allowed free movement after the cargo is unloaded. The U.S. State Department has expressed fears that independent oil sales from Kurdistan could contribute to the breakup of Iraq,
has said the oil belongs to all Iraqis, and warned potential buyers of
legal risks. But it has also made clear it will not intervene in a
commercial transaction. The
filings on Monday did not name the end-buyer of the cargo in the United
States. AET Offshore Services, a company in Texas that had been hired
to unload the tanker for the buyer, asked in a separate court filing
whether Iraq's claims were valid. Piecemeal
oil exports have gone from Iraqi Kurdistan to Turkey and Iran by truck
in the past, which Baghdad also opposed. But the opening of a new
pipeline to Turkey earlier this year, which could supply the Kurds with
far greater revenues, has met much fiercer opposition from Baghdad.
One cargo of Kurdish crude was delivered in Houston in May to an
unidentified buyer, and four other cargoes of Kurdish crude have been
delivered this year in Israel. The
case is Ministry of Oil of the Republic of Iraq v. Ministry of Natural
Resources of Kurdistan Regional Governate of Iraq et al, U.S. District
Court, Southern District of Texas, No. 3:14-cv-00249.
U.S. judge signs order to seize Kurdish oil from tanker off Texas
Reuters
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