Sunday, November 8, 2009

Resources Minister to visit Tokyo next week to discuss the loan for Iraq





October 30, 2009 (article from JICA - current article follows)

The Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) is advancing its activities around the pillars of a field-oriented approach, human security, and enhanced effectiveness, efficiency, and speed.

It has faded from world’s daily headlines, but the country remains deeply wounded. An estimated two million Iraq nationals are refugees in surrounding countries and several million of the country’s nearly 2.9 million people remain internally displaced. Despite being potentially one of the world’s richest oil producers, much of Iraq’s infrastructure and agriculture is in a shambles.
“We have lost two generations of people because of years of devastating wars”, Massoud Barzani, President of Iraq’s Kurdistan Regional Government said recently JICA has been increasingly active in recent years helping nations such as Iraq which are emerging from conflict situations to rebuild both their societies and economies.

It has been involved in projects in the Mindanao region of the Philippines, which still simmers from a civil war, Afghanistan, Liberia, Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo. In 2003 Japan announced its commitment to help rebuild Iraq by pledging a total of US$5 billion in various forms of aid including technical cooperation projects, grant assistance (US$ 1.5 billion) and soft loans (US$ 3.5 billion).

Twelve yen loan programs in such fields as energy, transportation, water, industrial infrastructure have already been undertaken, JICA has supported implementation of a grant aid projects as well as such technical assistance programs as helping to train some 3,500 Iraqis in various disciplines.

New Projects

Japan’s ambassador to Iraq, Shoji Ogawa, recently announced three additional yen loan projects totaling about US$850 million for a gas power plant in Anbar Governorate, a hydroelectric power program in Dohuk and water projects in Ninewa, Anbar and Salahuddin regions.

Those latest programs will virtually complete the allocation of US$3.5 billion in soft loans projected under the 2003 Japanese commitment. In early October, Mrs. Sadako Ogata made her first official visit to Iraq as JICA President, though she had become intimately involved in the country’s problems nearly two decades ago when, as High Commissioner for the UN refugee Agency UNHCR, she was responsible for helping the millions of people displaced in the first Gulf War.

Mrs. Ogata conferred with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Malaki and other top officials in Baghdad as well as traveling to the northern Kurdistan region of Iraq where she met President Massoud Barzani and other leading figures there. Underlining its commitment to Iraq, JICA in March commenced dispatching three Japanese staff to a field office in the northern city of Erbil.

These Japanese and two Iraqi staff, one of the agency’s smallest field teams, converted the changing room of a local hotel swimming pool into an office and within a few weeks was fully operational. Despite being best known as an international oil producer, the bulk of Mrs. Ogata’s discussions focused on Iraq’s agriculture, water and other basic infrastructure sectors.

Oil is extremely important to Iraq, President Barzani acknowledged, but he told Mrs. Ogata, “Agriculture does not end. We need (more) agriculture. We need comprehensive studies on water and irrigation, seeds, storage and food processing.”In Baghdad, Prime Minister Maliki also underlined the importance of both agriculture and education and requested JICA’s ongoing assistance in such fields.

Mrs. Ogata said she was “happy” to continue what she called “some small things as an outsider, in order to help the Iraqi people.”She underlined that JICA’s assistance thus far had concentrated on rebuilding parts of Iraq’s basic infrastructure but suggested the time had now come to shift focus somewhat to projects directly helping communities. “It is important to make sure that electricity, gas, water and health services reach the people who need them,” Mrs. Ogata said.

JICA’s Iraq representative Masaaki Matsushima said the living conditions of many Iraqis remained ‘problematic’ and one of his basic tasks in these early days of JICA’s presence was to “have more in-depth discussions with Iraqi counterparts in Baghdad and the governorates to make sure that what we do on the ground is (really) meaningful.”Whenever possible, JICA projects worldwide are planned to involve local communities and officials in both the planning and execution phases and to ensure they receive the training necessary to successfully maintain the programs after Japanese experts leave.


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November 9, 2009

Resources Minister to visit Tokyo next week to discuss the loan for Iraq

Invited Japanese businessmen to invest in the development of irrigation projects


بغداد ـ مصطفى مجيد Baghdad Mustafa Majid

Minister of Water Resources to strive to adopt programs designed to preserve water resources and rehabilitation projects from new, revealing that he would visit Japan next week to discuss the loan provided to Iraq

Calling its businessmen to invest in the development of irrigation projects. And the transfer of authoritative source in the ministry for the "morning" from the Resources Minister, Dr. Abdul Latif Rashid reiterated during a meeting at the ministry yesterday, the Japanese embassy charge d'affaires in Baghdad, Takahashi, to discuss the prospects of joint cooperation and contribute to the rehabilitation and development irrigation projects, seriousness of the ministry to adopt the promise of programs and promising to maintain the water resources which are decreasing and clear during the past period, as well as the rehabilitation of irrigation projects technically and technology.

Dr. Rashid revealed the source intention to visit Japan next week to meet members of the "JICA" Japanese and discussion details of the Japanese loan, as well as visit a number of specialized factories and companies to identify the state of the world's development, particularly in the construction equipment, noting the urgent need for the Ministry for the acquisition of all that is new and sophisticated mechanisms and machinery and equipment, noting that it reflected positively on accelerating the pace of completion of projects development carried out across the country.

At the conclusion of the meeting, Minister of Water Resources invited businessmen and Japanese companies to contribute to investment in water resources sector, which promise a vital contribution through the support of government development plans have been ongoing for more than six years, especially in light of improvements in security that with all provinces, as well as the urgent need to support and attribution of global companies with technical expertise contribution to improving the management of water resources in the country.

The Minister of Water Resources visited last year at the head of a technical delegation to Canada to visit factories and companies specialized industry Alkraouat Bakri, rivers and special machines Cleaning reeds and aquatic weeds, as well as Germany, which has taken him to a number of specialized companies and factories manufacturing heavy machinery and equipment advanced, which he acquired by his ministry will contribute to the implementation of its strategic task especially on a radical and lasting solution to the problem of erosion of the foundations of the Mosul Dam chronic.