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Thread: Iraq Moving To Permit Foreign Land Ownership - PM

  1. #1

    Default Iraq Moving To Permit Foreign Land Ownership - PM

    I did not see this posted. My apologies if it was. This is pretty big if you ask me.

    Iraq Moving To Permit Foreign Land Ownership - PM
    By Spencer Swartz
    Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
    LONDON (Dow Jones)--The Iraqi government is taking fresh action to attract badly needed foreign investment, including moving toward allowing foreigners to own land, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said Thursday. The Iraqi economy has been hit by falling oil revenue and the global recession.

    "We need more than at any other time in the past a vibrant private sector and we (the government) will see to it that all obstacles are removed for the private sector," al-Maliki told an investment conference here.

    Speaking through an interpreter, al-Maliki announced that his government is working to amend Iraqi law to allow foreign investors to own land in the country. The move would have to gain parliamentary approval. Currently, foreign investors are permitted to lease property for up to 50 years.

    Al-Maliki and several members of his cabinet, including his oil minister, have come to the U.K. capital for a two-day gathering billed as the biggest Iraqi investment conference outside the country since the end of the U.S.-led war in 2003.


    But the event comes at a delicate time for the Iraqi government. Weak oil prices and falling crude production and exports - caused by maintenance and issues - have forced the government to slash its 2009 budget a number of times in recent months.

    The insurgency continues to show resiliency, a reminder of the dangers for businesses operating in Iraq. In the past week, around 200 people have been killed by suicide bombings. Northern Iraq, a region that has enjoyed relative security and economic prosperity compared with the rest of Iraq, has seen a rise in militant violence in recent months in Mosul and Kirkuk, an oil-rich area province hotly disputed by Kurds, Turkomen, and Arab residents.

    The country also faces skilled labor shortages as thousands of Iraqis that left the country in past years have yet to return for security reasons. A reliable power supply and other infrastructure are also still just slowly being rebuilt since the war.

    Despite the recent uptick in violence in Iraq, the U.K. government announced Thursday it was in the process of reviewing its advice to U.K. nationals not to travel to Iraq. A downgrade or removal of the government's travel advice could move insurance companies to charge lower rates for companies sending employees to Iraq.

    The U.K. and Iraqi governments Thursday signed a memorandum of understanding to work more closely in several economic areas.
    U.K. Secretary of State for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Peter Mandelson said the agreement would entail U.K. and Iraqi companies cooperating in 12 areas, including energy and financial services.

    http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-...30-714509.html



    Champagne wishes and caviar dreams!!!

    anything can happen... it usually does.

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lux View Post
    I did not see this posted. My apologies if it was. This is pretty big if you ask me.

    Iraq Moving To Permit Foreign Land Ownership - PM
    By Spencer Swartz
    Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
    LONDON (Dow Jones)--The Iraqi government is taking fresh action to attract badly needed foreign investment, including moving toward allowing foreigners to own land, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said Thursday. The Iraqi economy has been hit by falling oil revenue and the global recession.

    "We need more than at any other time in the past a vibrant private sector and we (the government) will see to it that all obstacles are removed for the private sector," al-Maliki told an investment conference here.

    Speaking through an interpreter, al-Maliki announced that his government is working to amend Iraqi law to allow foreign investors to own land in the country. The move would have to gain parliamentary approval. Currently, foreign investors are permitted to lease property for up to 50 years.

    Al-Maliki and several members of his cabinet, including his oil minister, have come to the U.K. capital for a two-day gathering billed as the biggest Iraqi investment conference outside the country since the end of the U.S.-led war in 2003.


    But the event comes at a delicate time for the Iraqi government. Weak oil prices and falling crude production and exports - caused by maintenance and issues - have forced the government to slash its 2009 budget a number of times in recent months.

    The insurgency continues to show resiliency, a reminder of the dangers for businesses operating in Iraq. In the past week, around 200 people have been killed by suicide bombings. Northern Iraq, a region that has enjoyed relative security and economic prosperity compared with the rest of Iraq, has seen a rise in militant violence in recent months in Mosul and Kirkuk, an oil-rich area province hotly disputed by Kurds, Turkomen, and Arab residents.

    The country also faces skilled labor shortages as thousands of Iraqis that left the country in past years have yet to return for security reasons. A reliable power supply and other infrastructure are also still just slowly being rebuilt since the war.

    Despite the recent uptick in violence in Iraq, the U.K. government announced Thursday it was in the process of reviewing its advice to U.K. nationals not to travel to Iraq. A downgrade or removal of the government's travel advice could move insurance companies to charge lower rates for companies sending employees to Iraq.

    The U.K. and Iraqi governments Thursday signed a memorandum of understanding to work more closely in several economic areas.
    U.K. Secretary of State for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Peter Mandelson said the agreement would entail U.K. and Iraqi companies cooperating in 12 areas, including energy and financial services.

    http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-...30-714509.html
    I like it!

    Let's list obstacles.

    1. a weak currency exchange rate
    2.



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  3. #3
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    I like this!!!!




  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by diamondback View Post
    I like this!!!!
    Me too!




  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by diamondback View Post
    I like this!!!!

    Could be time to talk about some wheelings and dealings in Iraq brother!!



    Bush sucked, Obama sucks... Ron Paul 2012

  6. #6

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    About frickin time they woke up.




  7. #7

    Default

    If there's an RV I'm in, without an RV I'm still eating peasant food



    what, no wasabi?

  8. #8

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    Quote Originally Posted by RoyalBeluga View Post
    If there's an RV I'm in, without an RV I'm still eating peasant food
    Pheasants are good! After a nice day of shooting on the estate a nice pheasant dinner hits the spot!




  9. #9

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    Quote Originally Posted by Crow View Post
    Pheasants are good! After a nice day of shooting on the estate a nice pheasant dinner hits the spot!
    You have an estate Crow? You have pheasants?



    what, no wasabi?

  10. #10

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    Quote Originally Posted by RoyalBeluga View Post
    You have an estate Crow? You have pheasants?
    That was a joke Beluga. I am very poor, my accommodations are very meager. I am a goat herder.




  11. #11

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    Quote Originally Posted by Crow View Post
    That was a joke Beluga. I am very poor, my accommodations are very meager. I am a goat herder.
    Sounds like you're 'Coming To America', can I call you Eddie?



    what, no wasabi?

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by Crow View Post
    I am a goat herder.
    You don't go by the Stage Name of 'Chico' do you?




  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by geowhiz View Post
    Could be time to talk about some wheelings and dealings in Iraq brother!!
    Yes indeed!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!




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