Only Known Iraq Billionaire Hires Women Defying Hussein
By Alex Cuadros - Sep 23, 2013 12:00 AM ET
Faruk Mustafa Rasool first saw a mobile phone in 1998 while he was lying in a London hospital bed recovering from quadruple heart bypass surgery. Ignoring his doctors’ advice to rest, he started figuring out how to bring the device to his native Iraq.
Faruk was soon smuggling phones and transmitters over the Turkish border into his hometown of Sulaymaniyah, in Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region, according to his friend Shwan Taha. He built one of the country’s first wireless networks, something that once could have gotten him thrown in prison. Saddam Hussein banned mobile phones to isolate and better control the citizens of his totalitarian state.
Enlarge image Iraqi Billionaire Faruk Mustafa Rasool
Iraqi Billionaire Faruk Mustafa Rasool. Source: Faruk Group Holding
Enlarge image Only Known Iraq Billionaire Employs Women After Mobile Defiance
Faruk Group Holding's 39-story Grand Millenium hotel stands in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq. Source: Faruk Group Holding
Enlarge image Iraq’s Only Known Billionaire Emerges Hiring Women After Hussein
Faruk Group Holding's Azady Industries steel products manufacturing facility stands in Iraqi Kurdistan. Source: Faruk Group Holding
Enlarge image Iraq’s Only Known Billionaire Emerges Hiring Women After Hussein
Faruk Group Holding's headquarters stand in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq. Source: Faruk Group Holding
Enlarge image Only Known Iraq Billionaire Employs Women After Mobile Defiance
A computer rendering shows The Faruk Medical Center in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq. Source: Faruk Group Holding
“Mr. Faruk is the type of person you can put in any situation and he will excel,” said Taha, the founder of Baghdad-based investment bank Rabee Securities who has known Faruk since the late 1990s. “He takes a lot of risk.”
Faruk’s decision to risk Hussein’s wrath has made the 72-year-old Iraq’s only known billionaire. Asiacell Communications PJSC, the business Faruk founded, is the second-largest mobile-phone carrier in the country. He owns 28 percent of the company, a stake valued at $1.4 billion, and sold about $720 million in shares in a Baghdad initial public offering in February. It was the largest in the country’s history.
Through his Faruk Group Holding, he also has interests in cement, insurance, construction, information technology services, steel products, real estate and a car dealership. He has a net worth of at least $2.7 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, and has never appeared on an international wealth ranking. He declined to comment for this story.
Bureaucracy, Corruption
Entrepreneurship such as Faruk’s is rare in Iraq because of the tradition of bureaucracy and corruption left by Hussein’s regime, said Kanan Makiya, a professor at Brandeis University who wrote “Republic of Fear,” a book about Iraq under the late dictator. The best way to get rich in Iraq today, he said, is by skimming cash from the oil revenues that make up 95 percent of the government budget.
“We are so behind in Iraq,” Makiya said in a telephone interview from London. “The professionalism has been lost, the expertise, the ability to work with the outside world. The claustrophobic atmosphere of 30 years of Saddam remains.”
Makiya and Faruk met through the board of trustees of the American University of Iraq, Sulaimani. The school was founded in 2006 with the help of some original advocates of the second Iraq War, such as Makiya. Faruk has given more than $3 million to the university, and his son Zring got his MBA there.
Hiring Women
“It’s guys like Faruk who are critical to ensuring that there’s a true American presence in Kurdistan,” said Dov Zakheim, who served as undersecretary of defense under president George W. Bush and is a trustee at the school. “He represents a kind of secular, traditional but modern Muslim. He wants the American connection, he values the American system of education.”
In a region where women’s rights are often limited, Faruk’s companies are unusually inclusive, according to Taha.
“You walk into his companies and you see the amount of women working there, and it’s a breath of fresh air,” he said.
The billionaire owes some of his rise to security provided by Iraqi Kurdistan’s militias, known as peshmerga, or “those who face death” in Kurdish. They remained intact when Hussein’s army was dissolved following the 2003 invasion, and now oversee checkpoints crisscrossing the region and entry points to cities. Outside of disputed territories such as Kirkuk and Mosul, suicide bombings are rare in Iraqi Kurdistan, and almost unheard of in Sulaymaniyah.
Changing Skyline
Faruk’s hometown, known as Suli to expatriates, is expanding as oil revenues increasingly flow in from the central government. With a population of 1.5 million, the noise of jackhammers can be heard amid the scaffolding that lines dusty streets.
Along with the Kurdish city of Erbil, Suli has become the preferred base for foreign companies doing business in Iraq. Members of the Kurdish diaspora who fled to Europe and the U.S. under Hussein are now returning. In the past six years, Kurdistan has received $24 billion in private investment, according to an e-mail from Ziad Badr, Iraq country manager for the World Bank’s International Finance Corp.
Faruk’s role in expanding Suli is visible in its skyline. According to his holding company, he invested $160 million to build the 39-story Grand Millennium Hotel, whose dark-blue sail-like structure juts above the city’s low beige buildings and the surrounding desert. It’s scheduled to open later this year.
Among his other real estate investments in Suli are a smaller $15 million hotel, a $50 million apartment complex and 52.5 percent of a residential compound his holding company values at $26.5 million. He also has minority interests in two cement plants run by Paris-based Lafarge SA.
Imam’s Son
The son of an imam, Faruk graduated from the University of Baghdad with a degree in economics and accounting in 1964. He spent a few years working at a local bank, quitting in 1968 to join the Kurdish guerrillas fighting for independence in the north of the country. He ultimately joined the Communist party, according to his friend Taha. Hussein’s Ba’ath party was already in power.
“In the old days, we didn’t believe in money as motivation,” Faruk was quoted as saying in a
2007 Wall Street
Journal article.
In 1975, after growing tired of politics, he started a cinderblock factory with a friend. Unlike the Iraq-born banking and real estate tycoon Nadhmi Auchi, who fled the country in 1980 after clashing with Hussein’s powerful half-brother Barzan Ibrahim al-Tikriti, Faruk stayed and weathered the repression of Hussein’s regime.
Sarin Gas
He opened a poultry processing plant in 1986, just as Hussein was beginning a violent campaign against the Kurds, deploying mustard gas and sarin to kill tens of thousands of civilians. Faruk continued to expand following the 1991 Gulf War, even after Hussein again moved against the Kurds, putting down a short-lived uprising inspired by the American invasion.
As the U.S. imposed no-fly zones that helped protect Kurdistan from Ba’athist forces, Faruk bought a $15,000 satellite device from Inmarsat Plc in 1995 to create an international call center in Suli. He founded the company that became Asiacell four years later.
In October 2003, seven months after the second U.S. invasion, Faruk teamed up with Kuwait’s National Mobile Telecommunications Co. and won a license to run a GSM wireless network in northern Iraq.
The service was spotty. Iraqis needed separate mobile devices to make calls in different regions of the country.
First Phone
Aws Hassoo Eshaq, a resident of Erbil who is one of Asiacell’s 10 million customers today, says he didn’t mind. He got his first mobile phone through Asiacell shortly after graduating from high school in 2006 and enrolling at the University of Mosul.
“Cellphones were the only way to stay in touch with my family since Mosul became too dangerous” for them to visit, Eshaq said in an e-mail.
The service improved four years later, when Asiacell, backed by private-equity fund Merchantbridge & Co. and the Qatari government, won a $1.25 billion contract to offer mobile-phone services throughout Iraq for 15 years. Qatar’s Ooredoo QSC, after taking over Merchantbridge’s stake in 2012, became Asiacell’s controlling shareholder in the February IPO. Faruk remains as chairman.
Plane Crash
Merchantbridge was also close to architects of the Iraq wars. Founder and Chief Executive Officer Basil Al-Rahim helped start the Iraq Foundation in 1991 to advocate for democracy and regime change in Iraq. His sister and foundation co-founder Rend Al-Rahim Francke was named Iraqi ambassador to the U.S. in late 2003. Basil Al-Rahim died in a plane crash in 2011.
Despite such links, Makiya and Taha both say Faruk isn’t moved by ideology. He’s a businessman.
“It’s a time of inflection,” said Taha. “When things drastically change like they have in Iraq, smart people can take advantage of that opportunity.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Alex Cuadros in Sao Paulo at [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Matthew G. Miller at [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]
By Alex Cuadros - Sep 23, 2013 12:00 AM ET
Faruk Mustafa Rasool first saw a mobile phone in 1998 while he was lying in a London hospital bed recovering from quadruple heart bypass surgery. Ignoring his doctors’ advice to rest, he started figuring out how to bring the device to his native Iraq.
Faruk was soon smuggling phones and transmitters over the Turkish border into his hometown of Sulaymaniyah, in Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region, according to his friend Shwan Taha. He built one of the country’s first wireless networks, something that once could have gotten him thrown in prison. Saddam Hussein banned mobile phones to isolate and better control the citizens of his totalitarian state.
Enlarge image Iraqi Billionaire Faruk Mustafa Rasool
Iraqi Billionaire Faruk Mustafa Rasool. Source: Faruk Group Holding
Enlarge image Only Known Iraq Billionaire Employs Women After Mobile Defiance
Faruk Group Holding's 39-story Grand Millenium hotel stands in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq. Source: Faruk Group Holding
Enlarge image Iraq’s Only Known Billionaire Emerges Hiring Women After Hussein
Faruk Group Holding's Azady Industries steel products manufacturing facility stands in Iraqi Kurdistan. Source: Faruk Group Holding
Enlarge image Iraq’s Only Known Billionaire Emerges Hiring Women After Hussein
Faruk Group Holding's headquarters stand in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq. Source: Faruk Group Holding
Enlarge image Only Known Iraq Billionaire Employs Women After Mobile Defiance
A computer rendering shows The Faruk Medical Center in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq. Source: Faruk Group Holding
“Mr. Faruk is the type of person you can put in any situation and he will excel,” said Taha, the founder of Baghdad-based investment bank Rabee Securities who has known Faruk since the late 1990s. “He takes a lot of risk.”
Faruk’s decision to risk Hussein’s wrath has made the 72-year-old Iraq’s only known billionaire. Asiacell Communications PJSC, the business Faruk founded, is the second-largest mobile-phone carrier in the country. He owns 28 percent of the company, a stake valued at $1.4 billion, and sold about $720 million in shares in a Baghdad initial public offering in February. It was the largest in the country’s history.
Through his Faruk Group Holding, he also has interests in cement, insurance, construction, information technology services, steel products, real estate and a car dealership. He has a net worth of at least $2.7 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, and has never appeared on an international wealth ranking. He declined to comment for this story.
Bureaucracy, Corruption
Entrepreneurship such as Faruk’s is rare in Iraq because of the tradition of bureaucracy and corruption left by Hussein’s regime, said Kanan Makiya, a professor at Brandeis University who wrote “Republic of Fear,” a book about Iraq under the late dictator. The best way to get rich in Iraq today, he said, is by skimming cash from the oil revenues that make up 95 percent of the government budget.
“We are so behind in Iraq,” Makiya said in a telephone interview from London. “The professionalism has been lost, the expertise, the ability to work with the outside world. The claustrophobic atmosphere of 30 years of Saddam remains.”
Makiya and Faruk met through the board of trustees of the American University of Iraq, Sulaimani. The school was founded in 2006 with the help of some original advocates of the second Iraq War, such as Makiya. Faruk has given more than $3 million to the university, and his son Zring got his MBA there.
Hiring Women
“It’s guys like Faruk who are critical to ensuring that there’s a true American presence in Kurdistan,” said Dov Zakheim, who served as undersecretary of defense under president George W. Bush and is a trustee at the school. “He represents a kind of secular, traditional but modern Muslim. He wants the American connection, he values the American system of education.”
In a region where women’s rights are often limited, Faruk’s companies are unusually inclusive, according to Taha.
“You walk into his companies and you see the amount of women working there, and it’s a breath of fresh air,” he said.
The billionaire owes some of his rise to security provided by Iraqi Kurdistan’s militias, known as peshmerga, or “those who face death” in Kurdish. They remained intact when Hussein’s army was dissolved following the 2003 invasion, and now oversee checkpoints crisscrossing the region and entry points to cities. Outside of disputed territories such as Kirkuk and Mosul, suicide bombings are rare in Iraqi Kurdistan, and almost unheard of in Sulaymaniyah.
Changing Skyline
Faruk’s hometown, known as Suli to expatriates, is expanding as oil revenues increasingly flow in from the central government. With a population of 1.5 million, the noise of jackhammers can be heard amid the scaffolding that lines dusty streets.
Along with the Kurdish city of Erbil, Suli has become the preferred base for foreign companies doing business in Iraq. Members of the Kurdish diaspora who fled to Europe and the U.S. under Hussein are now returning. In the past six years, Kurdistan has received $24 billion in private investment, according to an e-mail from Ziad Badr, Iraq country manager for the World Bank’s International Finance Corp.
Faruk’s role in expanding Suli is visible in its skyline. According to his holding company, he invested $160 million to build the 39-story Grand Millennium Hotel, whose dark-blue sail-like structure juts above the city’s low beige buildings and the surrounding desert. It’s scheduled to open later this year.
Among his other real estate investments in Suli are a smaller $15 million hotel, a $50 million apartment complex and 52.5 percent of a residential compound his holding company values at $26.5 million. He also has minority interests in two cement plants run by Paris-based Lafarge SA.
Imam’s Son
The son of an imam, Faruk graduated from the University of Baghdad with a degree in economics and accounting in 1964. He spent a few years working at a local bank, quitting in 1968 to join the Kurdish guerrillas fighting for independence in the north of the country. He ultimately joined the Communist party, according to his friend Taha. Hussein’s Ba’ath party was already in power.
“In the old days, we didn’t believe in money as motivation,” Faruk was quoted as saying in a
2007 Wall Street
Journal article.
In 1975, after growing tired of politics, he started a cinderblock factory with a friend. Unlike the Iraq-born banking and real estate tycoon Nadhmi Auchi, who fled the country in 1980 after clashing with Hussein’s powerful half-brother Barzan Ibrahim al-Tikriti, Faruk stayed and weathered the repression of Hussein’s regime.
Sarin Gas
He opened a poultry processing plant in 1986, just as Hussein was beginning a violent campaign against the Kurds, deploying mustard gas and sarin to kill tens of thousands of civilians. Faruk continued to expand following the 1991 Gulf War, even after Hussein again moved against the Kurds, putting down a short-lived uprising inspired by the American invasion.
As the U.S. imposed no-fly zones that helped protect Kurdistan from Ba’athist forces, Faruk bought a $15,000 satellite device from Inmarsat Plc in 1995 to create an international call center in Suli. He founded the company that became Asiacell four years later.
In October 2003, seven months after the second U.S. invasion, Faruk teamed up with Kuwait’s National Mobile Telecommunications Co. and won a license to run a GSM wireless network in northern Iraq.
The service was spotty. Iraqis needed separate mobile devices to make calls in different regions of the country.
First Phone
Aws Hassoo Eshaq, a resident of Erbil who is one of Asiacell’s 10 million customers today, says he didn’t mind. He got his first mobile phone through Asiacell shortly after graduating from high school in 2006 and enrolling at the University of Mosul.
“Cellphones were the only way to stay in touch with my family since Mosul became too dangerous” for them to visit, Eshaq said in an e-mail.
The service improved four years later, when Asiacell, backed by private-equity fund Merchantbridge & Co. and the Qatari government, won a $1.25 billion contract to offer mobile-phone services throughout Iraq for 15 years. Qatar’s Ooredoo QSC, after taking over Merchantbridge’s stake in 2012, became Asiacell’s controlling shareholder in the February IPO. Faruk remains as chairman.
Plane Crash
Merchantbridge was also close to architects of the Iraq wars. Founder and Chief Executive Officer Basil Al-Rahim helped start the Iraq Foundation in 1991 to advocate for democracy and regime change in Iraq. His sister and foundation co-founder Rend Al-Rahim Francke was named Iraqi ambassador to the U.S. in late 2003. Basil Al-Rahim died in a plane crash in 2011.
Despite such links, Makiya and Taha both say Faruk isn’t moved by ideology. He’s a businessman.
“It’s a time of inflection,” said Taha. “When things drastically change like they have in Iraq, smart people can take advantage of that opportunity.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Alex Cuadros in Sao Paulo at [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Matthew G. Miller at [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]
Today at 4:50 am by Rocky
» MM&C 11/14/24 Trump and the Iraqi Banks Puzzle
Today at 4:49 am by Rocky
» utube 11/13/24 MM&C MM&C News-Private Sector- Electronic Payments-Reconstruction-Development-Digit
Today at 4:49 am by Rocky
» utube MM&C 11/15/24 Update-Budget-Non Oil Resources-CBI-USFED-Cross Border Transfers-Oil
Today at 4:44 am by Rocky
» New decline in gold in Iraq.. and globally records the worst week in 3 years
Today at 4:40 am by Rocky
» Monitoring body approves 2023 imports annual report
Today at 4:39 am by Rocky
» Development Road: Faw Port Ignites Regional Corridor Race
Today at 4:37 am by Rocky
» First in Iraq... Diyala sets a plan for "rural reconstruction"
Today at 4:35 am by Rocky
» Al-Saadi: Influential parties are working to erase the theft of the century file
Today at 4:34 am by Rocky
» MP: Baghdad supports the "Diyala Artery" project with 40 billion dinars
Today at 4:33 am by Rocky
» Source: General amnesty law will pave the way for the return of terrorist groups
Today at 4:32 am by Rocky
» The Prime Minister stresses the need to expedite the completion of the requirements for restructurin
Today at 4:30 am by Rocky
» Minister of Resources: The project to develop the left side of the Tigris River has reached its fina
Today at 4:28 am by Rocky
» Foreign Minister: We are proceeding with implementing the associated gas exploitation program
Today at 4:27 am by Rocky
» Swiss Ambassador Expresses His Country's Desire to Invest in Iraq
Today at 4:25 am by Rocky
» "We left the camel and its load" .. Moroccan farmers await "imminent compensation" from Iraq
Today at 4:24 am by Rocky
» OPEC sues Iraqi minister over oil violations.. What is Kurdistan's involvement?
Today at 4:23 am by Rocky
» Iraq warns of 'dire consequences' of imposing barriers to plastic products
Today at 4:22 am by Rocky
» Iranian newspaper: Iraq's development path is a step towards regional economic integration
Today at 4:21 am by Rocky
» Al-Mandlawi discusses with the Russian ambassador developing relations in the fields of economy, inv
Today at 4:19 am by Rocky
» Oil Minister discusses with Dutch Ambassador strengthening bilateral relations
Today at 4:17 am by Rocky
» The Minister of Oil discusses with the companies "+dss" and "Xergy", joint cooperation to develop th
Today at 4:16 am by Rocky
» Rafidain Bank announces a plan to include other branches in the implementation of the comprehensive
Today at 4:15 am by Rocky
» With the presence of the opposition... Baghdad supports the partnership government in Kurdistan
Today at 4:13 am by Rocky
» Parliamentary move to raise retirement age in state institutions to 63 years
Today at 4:12 am by Rocky
» Through leaks.. Warnings against creating political crises as parliamentary elections approach
Today at 4:11 am by Rocky
» Iraqi oil returns to decline in global markets
Today at 4:09 am by Rocky
» Parliamentary Committee: Iraq uses its international relations to avert the dangers of war from its
Today at 4:08 am by Rocky
» The value of non-oil imports for Sulaymaniyah and Halabja governorates during a week
Today at 4:07 am by Rocky
» Rafidain: Continuous expansion in implementing the comprehensive banking system
Today at 4:05 am by Rocky
» Planning: The population census includes residents of Iraq according to a special mechanism
Today at 4:04 am by Rocky
» Transparency website reveals non-oil imports to Sulaymaniyah and Halabja during a week
Today at 4:00 am by Rocky
» Al-Sudani directs the adoption of specialized international companies to prepare a unified structure
Today at 3:58 am by Rocky
» MP warns of a move that will worsen the housing crisis and calls on the government
Today at 3:56 am by Rocky
» Disagreements strike the Kurdish house... hindering the formation of the regional parliament and gov
Today at 3:55 am by Rocky
» Hundreds of Moroccan farmers are waiting for “imminent compensation” from Iraq.. What’s the story?
Today at 3:54 am by Rocky
» Iraq 10-Year Review: Spending, Imports, Unemployment in 2024 at ‘Highest Level’ in a Decade
Today at 3:52 am by Rocky
» Call to all smokers in Iraq: Prepare for the law
Today at 3:50 am by Rocky
» utube 11/11/24 MM&C News Reporting-IRAQ-USA-Financial Inclusion up 48%-Money Inside & Out of Iraq
Yesterday at 5:16 am by Rocky
» Al-Mandlawi to the UN envoy: The supreme authority diagnosed the problems and provided solutions for
Yesterday at 5:15 am by Rocky
» Saleh: Government strategy to boost gold reserves as part of asset diversification
Yesterday at 5:14 am by Rocky
» Prime Minister's advisor rules out oil price collapse: Trump's policy will not sacrifice petrodollar
Yesterday at 5:09 am by Rocky
» Tripartite alliance between Iraq, Egypt and Jordan to boost maritime trade
Yesterday at 5:06 am by Rocky
» Parliamentary Committee reveals date of entry into force of Personal Status Law
Yesterday at 5:03 am by Rocky
» Al-Fatah warns against US blackmail and Trump's intentions for the next stage
Yesterday at 5:02 am by Rocky
» A leader in the law: If the Americans do not leave on their own two feet, we will expel them in fune
Yesterday at 5:00 am by Rocky
» MP: Next Sunday's session will witness the passing of "important laws"
Yesterday at 4:59 am by Rocky
» There is a financial aspect.. Al-Zaidi rules out voting on the real estate law
Yesterday at 4:57 am by Rocky
» "Promising" economic opportunities in central Iraq open doors to investment, trade and unemployment
Yesterday at 4:55 am by Rocky
» Minister of Transport: Arab interest in the development road project
Yesterday at 4:53 am by Rocky
» Bitcoin Fails to Maintain Its Meteoric Rise
Yesterday at 4:51 am by Rocky
» Amending the retirement age on the parliament's table.. This is the latest that has been reached
Yesterday at 4:50 am by Rocky
» Launching the Health Unit Initiative in Iraqi Schools
Yesterday at 4:49 am by Rocky
» Will Iraq be the savior of the countries of the region if oil prices fall?
Yesterday at 4:48 am by Rocky
» Regarding electrical energy.. Government moves to meet the needs of next summer
Yesterday at 4:47 am by Rocky
» {Retirement age} sparks debate in parliament
Yesterday at 4:46 am by Rocky
» Minister of Transport to {Sabah}: Arab interest in the development road project
Yesterday at 4:45 am by Rocky
» Planning: Two important pre-census activities start today and tomorrow
Yesterday at 4:43 am by Rocky
» Next week.. contracting with 2500 applicants on a {contract} basis
Yesterday at 4:42 am by Rocky
» Service Effort: Opening 30 projects in agricultural areas next month
Yesterday at 4:41 am by Rocky
» The House of Representatives issues a clarification regarding its tenders and official invitations
Yesterday at 4:36 am by Rocky
» Issuance of (3000) new decisions for politically dismissed employees and non-employees
Yesterday at 4:34 am by Rocky
» Al-Sudani discusses cooperation in the field of energy and development of the oil and gas sector wit
Yesterday at 4:32 am by Rocky
» Trade: Transferring 400 billion dinars to pay farmers’ dues for the remaining wheat for the northern
Yesterday at 4:31 am by Rocky
» Iranian Minister of Trade and Industry Injured During Trip to Kurdistan
Yesterday at 4:29 am by Rocky
» Chairman of the Integrity Commission: Corruption negatively affects reconstruction and development a
Yesterday at 4:28 am by Rocky
» Strengthening judicial cooperation on the table of Judge Zidane and his Turkish counterpart
Yesterday at 4:26 am by Rocky
» Al-Sudani directs the Ministry of Oil to communicate with Shell to implement projects that serve Ira
Yesterday at 4:25 am by Rocky
» One of them is "protocol".. A politician determines the extent of the difference between Al-Sudani's
Yesterday at 4:24 am by Rocky
» Iraq confirms its keenness to support OPEC unity to ensure oil price stability
Yesterday at 4:22 am by Rocky
» It may drop to 40%.. Al-Kanani warns of a sharp drop in oil and directs an urgent call to the govern
Yesterday at 4:21 am by Rocky
» Distribution next week.. The region will receive nearly 533 billion dinars to finance its employees’
Yesterday at 4:20 am by Rocky
» Iraq expresses interest in cooperating with major international oil companies
Yesterday at 4:19 am by Rocky
» Criticism follows the performance of the Minister of Foreign Affairs in international positions.. Wi
Yesterday at 4:18 am by Rocky
» Al-Mashhadani's election "embarrassed him"... Will Al-Sudani implement the ministerial reshuffle?
Yesterday at 4:14 am by Rocky
» Will the "dollar crisis" topple the central bank governor?
Yesterday at 4:11 am by Rocky
» The Oil and Gas Law Returns to the Forefront... Will Al-Sudani Be Able to Resolve the Disputes Over
Yesterday at 4:09 am by Rocky
» Oil Licenses in Basra: An Environmental Disaster That Raises Cancer Rates and Suffocates the Populat
Yesterday at 4:08 am by Rocky
» Iraq begins intensive campaign to deport illegal foreign workers and regulate the labor market
Yesterday at 4:06 am by Rocky
» Government advisor explains Baghdad Metro project specifications and confirms its continuation witho
Yesterday at 4:05 am by Rocky
» Al-Mashhadani to the 188 Alliance delegation: The best solution is to give people the freedom to cho
Yesterday at 4:04 am by Rocky
» Parliamentarian: Ambassadors and representatives of foreign missions came to Parliament to prevent t
Yesterday at 4:03 am by Rocky
» Al-Sudani's advisor reveals the reasons for the lack of gold in the government's reserves
Yesterday at 4:02 am by Rocky
» New fortifications close the most dangerous border gaps between Iraq and Syria
Yesterday at 4:01 am by Rocky
» "Baghdad breathes a sigh of relief" .. Closing of 144 illegal factories that emit toxins into the ai
Yesterday at 4:00 am by Rocky
» Iraqi oil prices continue to decline amid global price decline
Yesterday at 3:59 am by Rocky
» “The War of Leaks” Confuses the Political Scene... Blackmail or Expose of Corruption?
Yesterday at 3:56 am by Rocky
» Government sends budget amendment to resolve differences with region
Yesterday at 3:55 am by Rocky
» More than 800 “dual-job” employees work at Najaf Airport
Yesterday at 3:54 am by Rocky
» Slight rise in dollar prices against the dinar in Iraqi stock exchanges
Yesterday at 3:49 am by Rocky
» Where did the parliamentary discussions on the "retirement age" reach?
Yesterday at 3:48 am by Rocky
» The region "mobilizes" for the first census in 37 years: It will increase the budget share and the n
Yesterday at 3:47 am by Rocky
» "Thousands of them are suspended" .. Draft laws challenge the remainder of the life of the current p
Wed 13 Nov 2024, 5:00 am by Rocky
» Population, oil and salaries...hot files in the meeting between Al-Sudani and Barzani
Wed 13 Nov 2024, 4:56 am by Rocky
» Political attempts to obstruct it.. Personal Status Law on its way to legislation
Wed 13 Nov 2024, 4:54 am by Rocky
» MP: Al-Sudani has reached the conviction of the necessity of removing some ministers
Wed 13 Nov 2024, 4:53 am by Rocky
» Central Bank announces progress in dollar control procedures
Wed 13 Nov 2024, 4:49 am by Rocky
» Baghdad.. Closing 144 informal metal smelting factories to reduce pollution
Wed 13 Nov 2024, 4:47 am by Rocky
» Private Banks Association: Iraq to adopt advanced trade finance system by end of 2024
Wed 13 Nov 2024, 4:46 am by Rocky