Iraq needs $88.2 billion for reconstruction: minister

Iraq is reportedly seeking $88.2 billion (A$112b) to rebuild after its war with the Islamic State.

Men walk past destroyed buildings in Mosul.

Men walk past destroyed buildings in Mosul. Source: Getty

Iraq needs $88.2 billion (A$112b) to rebuild after years of war against the Islamic State group, Planning Minister Salman al-Jumaili said Monday, as an international conference on the country's reconstruction opened in Kuwait.

Iraq hopes to raise billions of dollars in pledges at the three-day meeting, as the country reels from the rise of IS and punishing fightback against the jihadist group.
Destroyed buildings in Iraq.
Destroyed buildings in Iraq. Source: Getty
Baghdad declared victory against IS in December, after almost three years of war against the jihadist group that left large swathes of the country destroyed and millions displaced.

The $88.2 billion estimate was based on an assessment study by Iraqi and international experts, the planning minister said.
Qusai Abdelfattah, director general at the planning ministry, said $22 billion of those funds were needed immediately and the rest for the medium term.

"We have started some reconstruction programmes in areas affected by war," said Mustafa al-Hiti, head of the reconstruction fund for areas hit in the fight against IS.

"But what we have accomplished is less than one percent of what Iraq needs," Hiti said.
The Salam Hospital in Mosul.
The Salam Hospital in Mosul. Source: Getty
He said funds are urgently needed to "restore basic and infrastructure services" in many provinces.

"We have more than 138,000 houses damaged, more than half this number completely destroyed," Hiti said, adding that more than 2.5 million Iraqis are still displaced.

Since the 1980s, resource-rich Iraq has been battered by war and international economic sanctions.

On Sunday, UNICEF said that one in four Iraqi children are in poverty and four million are in need of assistance as a result of the country’s war with Islamic State militants.

Additional reporting: Reuters


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2 min read
Published 12 February 2018 7:54pm
Updated 12 February 2018 8:17pm
Source: AFP, SBS


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