Page added on September 29, 2007
The big oil multinationals thought the prize was theirs under new production-sharing agreements in the war-torn country. But the ‘Iraqi wealth for the Iraqi people’ movement is growing amid internecine conflicts and trade union resistance.
“Iraq is open for business,” promised oil ministry officials. “Investment can reduce Iraq’s poverty and help bring peace,” came back the chorus from oil company chiefs.
As the executives toasted one another with cocktails sponsored by Lukoil at the Iraq Petroleum 2007 conference in Dubai earlier this month, ordinary Iraqis were living in a state of emergency. Oxfam reports that 28 per cent of the country’s children are malnourished, that four million people regularly can’t buy enough to eat, and that 70 per cent are without adequate water supplies. With 60,000 Iraqis fleeing their homes each month and reports of an average of 62 violent deaths per day, the soft carpets, piped music and quiet deal-making at the Hyatt Regency hotel were a world away from occupied Iraq.
At the same time, a parallel conference was taking place in Basra under the banner, “Oil wealth belongs to the Iraqi people”. Organised by the Iraqi Federation of Oil Unions (Ifou) and attended by civil society leaders, activists and academics from all over the country, this was Ifou’s third conference aimed at stopping the likes of Shell and BP from gaining a controlling stake in Iraq’s oil wealth.
With a growing movement to keep the oil in the public sector, disputes between the Kurdish regional government (KRG) and Baghdad, and no legal framework for investment, the black goldrush that international oil companies are banking on is not a done deal.
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