In the afternoon on Monday the price of December futures for the North Sea oil mixture Brent rose by 1.75 percent, to $58.17 per barrel, whereas the price of November futures for WTI rose by 1.46 percent to $52.2 per barrel.
This comes amid tensions between Baghdad and Kirkuk, which have further escalated following Iraqi Kurdistan's independence referendum. Although Kirkuk is not a part of Iraqi Kurdistan it took part in the referendum.
“Oil Brent is now quoted at 1.4% higher than at the close of Friday's trading in Moscow, with the main rise happening this morning. Market participants are reacting to the escalation of the conflict between the Iraqi Kurdistan authorities and the central government of Iraq. …The dynamics of oil markets … were influenced by emerging over the weekend of reports that Saudi Arabia may postpone holding an IPO of company Aramco,” a report by an analyst of Sberbank KIB read.
The Iraqi troops have been conducting an operation in the region and have reported capturing the Kirkuk airport from the Kurdish Army in the oil-rich region, which aims to gain independence like Iraqi Kurdistan.
The Iraqi federal police managed to capture the Kirkuk administration building without any fight, a source told Sputnik.
"The Peshmerga will continue to defend Kurdistan, its peoples and interests," the Security Council added.
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Abadi ordered the country’s army and police to secure bases and federal installations in Kirkuk, but avoid confrontations with the Kurdish forces.
Kurdish television channel Rudaw reported earlier in the day, citing a Peshmerga commander, that at least seven members of the PMF were killed during clashes in Kirkuk.