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A shining example in Kurdistan

Opportunities are rich in oil, agriculture and other sectors in Iraq's Kurdish north, according to US and Kurdish officials, but US investment is still paltry in what promoters bill as "the other Iraq".

  • Reuters
  • Published: 00:27 February 27, 2008
  • Gulf News

Opportunities are rich in oil, agriculture and other sectors in Iraq's Kurdish north, according to US and Kurdish officials, but US investment is still paltry in what promoters bill as "the other Iraq".

US business and government officials, seeking to encourage investment and ease fears about doing business in war-torn Iraq, called the autonomous Kurdistan region a "shining example" of what the entire country might one day become.

Boosters point to rich natural resources, a favourable investment climate and greater security.

The region, with its own government and parliament, has boasted a lower level of violence than the rest of Iraq, which is now cautiously embracing security improvements in Baghdad and elsewhere almost five years after the US-led invasion.

The Iraqi government is hoping to rebuild an economy, and public infrastructure, battered by years of sanctions and war, which plunged many Iraqis into poverty and joblessness.

But the employment outlook is far brighter in Kurdistan, and median incomes are up to 25 per cent higher than in the rest of Iraq, the regional government says.

Even so, Qubad Jalal Talabani, the Kurdistan Regional Government's representative to the United States and son of the Iraqi president, said US business accounts only for one per cent of total investment in Kurdistan. "The United States lags behind most other countries," he said.

Major investor

Turkey is a major investor in Kurdistan's bridges, banks and oil sector, Talabany said, despite longstanding tension with Ankara over the Kurdish rebels who have launched attacks from their mountain enclaves.

While opportunities may abound, evidence is hard to find that investors are willing to put aside concerns about general security in Iraq, along with doubts about the country's political stability, and come to Kurdistan in droves.

Neither Kurdish nor US officials were immediately able to provide figures for US investment in the region.

Oil is certainly a lure. The Kurdish government has clashed with Baghdad over petroleum deals it has signed with foreign oil firms, which the central government deems illegal.

Talabani, speaking at the US Chamber of Commerce in Washington, insisted the Kurdish government's oil contracts would benefit the entire country.

Kurdish officials are also hoping that agribusiness will become another driver for foreign investment in Kurdistan, a traditional wheat producer.

The region's acreage of field crops, mostly wheat and barley, was about 2.3 million acres (950,000 hectares) in 2007, according to the Kurdish Regional Government.

Processing and export facilities are needed to invigorate those sectors, along with tobacco, fruits and nuts, maybe even wine, Talabani said.

"The right investments will turn Kurdistan into the breadbasket of the region," he added.

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