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Iraq's reconstruction and development

Babylon, Al-Qasim Green University, approved and waiting for funding.

UPA’s design will potentially see the university as the first LEED certified building in the country. Once the campus is registered in the local Green Building Counsel (GBC), it can be classified according to LEED standards. Specifically, within the structure of the campus building plan, the Presidency Building is projected to achieve LEED Gold.

Related: Clemson University’s Lee Hall III Expansion Awarded LEED Gold Certification

The newly established Al Qassim Green University will be one of a kind in Iraq as its curriculum will be based on green technology education. The final plan will include ample student housing and staff accommodation as well as sports facilities, a spacious auditorium, library, entertainment center and power building.

summary
- Total development cost is about $-800+ million dollars.
-focuses on medical sciences. agriculture, and green technology, sports, and arts.
-includes a large 1000 capacity teaching hospital hospital as a further development




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work on the hussainiyah 200 bed hospital in Baghdad

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progress on the 600 Ibn sina hospital in baghdad

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500 bed capacity hospital being constructed in Samawa.

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cardiovascular specialty hospital in Karbala, 9 floors, 185 bed.
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Wasit, Kut educational and research hospital, 400 bed.
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Iran to Build 200,000 Houses in Iraq

“Iraq is planning to build 2mln houses for the poor people,” Rostam Qassemi, a former oil minister under President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who is now an advisor to the first vice-president, said.

“And Iran has taken up construction of 200,000 of these residential units,” he added.

Qassemi said that he will travel to Iraq today to work out a final planning for the two countries' cooperation in building these houses.

Iran and Iraq have enjoyed growing ties ever since the overthrow of the former Iraqi dictator, Saddam Hussein, during the 2003 US invasion of the Muslim country.

Early December, Senior Iranian and Iraqi officials, in a joint news conference in Tehran, stressed the need for the further expansion of mutual cooperation in economic fields.

During the news conference, Iranian First Vice-President Eshaq Jahangiri and Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Al-Maliki reiterated the necessity for increasing exchange of visits between the two countries’ businessmen and trade officials in a bid to further consolidate Iran-Iraq economic ties.

The Iranian first vice-president reiterated that enhancement of bilateral ties tops the agenda of both Tehran and Baghdad, and said “the agreements between Tehran and Baghdad have provided proper opportunities for Iranian businessmen to play a bigger role in the gas and housing industries and other sectors in Iraq”.

The Iraqi prime minister, pointed to his meeting with the Iranian first vice-president, and said, “We agreed to have extensive activities and we also agreed on establishing different ways for conducting (joint) economic activities.

Farsnews

Iranian firms to build 200,000 houses in Iraq - Zawya
 
IRAQ should welcome GCC investment in Mineral exploration and extraction that includes KSA, UAE, Turkey and along with Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait as well.
 
Which Gulf Arabs are investing the most in Iraq?

UAE
But that's usually Iraqi and foreign companies based in the UAE.

Future trade on large scale depends on the government, whether they approve the Gulf rail link to Iraq which they rejected earlier.
 
Baghdad's first suspension bridge to be built on the Tigris river designed by a German company
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Iraqi airways the oldest airline of the Middle East coming back
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Next year 787's will be in Iraqi airways
 
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Mosul university residential project. 1000 units, 13 apartments, 11 floors each.
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Ferdous residential apartments. 7 apartments of 13 floors. Under construction, unfortunately no construction images.
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Final design of hurriyah, changed from 200 to 400 bed capacity.
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Final design revealed for Karbala university hospital, 600 bed.

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First construction images
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Basra province, Zubayr hospital, one of five main being built in Basra's different districts. Range from 120-250 bed.
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Karbala cultural centre. Includes classroom, conference halls, theaters, media studios, library... Under construction
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Bloom To Begin Work On Iraqi Shores Of Karbala Project » Gulf Business
National Holding subsidiary Bloom Properties has announced its intention to start infrastructure work on the large-scale Model Village and Shores of Karbala project on the banks of Lake Razaza in Iraq.

The company has submitted a final master plan for the 20 square kilometre development, west of the Iraqi city of Karbala, to the country’s National Investment Commission, and is awaiting approval.

Bloom said the site will include civic amenities and facilities and will be developed over a period of eight years.

Upon completion, it is expected to provide 40,000 housing units across four districts that will house 200,000 to 250,000 people.

The project will consist of residential units of all types including villas, town houses, apartments, hotels, shopping malls, open markets, business centres, clinics, schools, mosques, public parks, children playgrounds, government, social and sports facilities, restaurants, cafes and auditoriums, Bloom said.

“The Shores of Karbala project is one of the largest of its kind in Iraq, and we will leverage our expertise and unique capabilities in developing a world class urban metropolis that meets the housing and lifestyle needs of the Iraqi people. We are confident that the project will attract more investment to the city through its various phases of development,” said the developer.

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Wafiq Al-Samarrai
on : Monday, 28 Apr, 2014

Opinion: Iraq is Recovering
Iraq under presidents Abdul Salam and Abdul Rahman Arif—the brothers who ruled the country from 1963 to 1968—was not an oppressive police state. This was especially true of Abdul Rahman, who was moderate and honest, or as some politicians prefer to describe him, “weak.” Nevertheless, the situation in Iraq was under control. The brothers’ terms in office did not witness any acts of terrorism, assassinations, malicious or arbitrary arrests, or preemptive security strikes. Secret informants—who were few in number at the time—received simple wages. Iraqis did not have concerns about the government’s intentions towards their lives or those of their families. However, while the intelligence forces close to the president were extremely weak, the military intelligence service was mired in conspiracy.

As for today, with the exception of some positive aspects like pockets of growing affluence and freedom of speech, the country is ailing due to constitutional problems, plots being hatched, corruption, sectarianism and racism. This is not to mention the tough years that followed the 2003 invasion and the philosophy of governance that grew up after it, one which combined both backwards-looking and progressive elements.

However, this is no reason for unnecessary despair and frustration. Signs of change have started to emerge in the streets of Baghdad in particular and Iraq in general, without foreign mediation or intervention. Many foreign countries wish to see Iraq mired in chaos and blood.

Signs of change and transformation became clear in the differences that emerged within once homogenous political blocs. These differences have become serious disputes that are difficult to overcome, even in the face of the pressures of past obsessions. A new generation of politicians has emerged: one that is not a prisoner of tradition and seeks to form a special identity, even if it contradicts that of the ethnic and sectarian majorities. The issue of sectarianism is running out of steam and lacks the power to incite the tensions it once did, tensions which proved to be not only illusory but also responsible for exacerbating regional and factional conflicts.

Iraq today is in a healthy condition, regardless of the negative appearances. Nothing can be more in the interest of Iraqi society than individuals moving beyond their sectarian and ethnic identities and towards a national one. Such factionalism has shed the blood of the Iraqi people and hindered the progress of their country.

Today, Shi’ite politicians bitterly criticize each other in a manner indicative of a rapid movement away from the tense sectarianism in the country. The same is true for Sunnis, despite their true suffering and the exclusion of many of their representatives. With every day that passes, the political stalemate among Kurds proves more serious. The strategic agreement between the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and the Kurdistan Democratic Party does not hold water anymore.

Observers of the Iraqi scene realize that this kind of dispute now is now carried on in public, regardless of the ethnic and sectarian conflicts that once threatened the unity and fate of the country—had it not been for the people’s love for Iraq and the remaining loyal politicians. The sectarian and ethnic criticism traded by the members of the political factions should have stopped long ago in order to limit the instability within the political blocs in accordance with patriotic and civilized principles. However, the early years of change saw an extremely distracting process, and some individuals did not realize it was mere political propaganda based on greed and temptation, which is not only divorced from national interests but from those of these very sects and ethnicities.

Political competition in Kurdistan has become based on power-sharing in a manner that undermines the hegemony of a single party or individual. This is a major development. In terms of the Shi’ite majority in parliament, those who think that achieving harmony and coordination among the three Shi’a blocs is an easy matter—as was the case in the past thanks to the role of Iran—are totally mistaken. Each of the three Shi’a blocs is trying to extend its alliance beyond the politically fragmented Shi’a household, in a sign of the significance of the trend towards more “normal” politics. As for the Sunni blocs, it appears that the Mutahidoun bloc is way ahead of the rest in terms of selection of candidates and relations with other blocs. Without doubt, it will gain more votes than any other bloc.

Despite violence and corruption, Iraqi society is beginning to recover. Even if it takes a long time to spread culture and reform, all that is needed is the growth and promotion of patriotic awareness, and the confrontation of the dark forces of extremism and sectarianism, and preventing them from tempting the youth. No other means can be more effective in this than a media detached from the sectarianism, racism and reactionary incitement that have brought Iraqis nothing but backwardness and strife.

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Wafiq Al-Samarrai is an Iraqi police official and security expert
 

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