(February 27, 2004) Top Middle East accountancy practice Ernst & Young is pushing ahead with its efforts to move back into Iraq and plans to reopen there within days.
Iraq needs big debt writeoff — Fitch ratings agency
(February 26, 2004) Iraq needs a big reduction in its $117-$122 billion debts, but it is unlikely to receive as generous a reduction as 90 percent given to the likes of Congo, credit rating agency Fitch said on Thursday.
Iraq debt levels ‘cannot be sustained’
(February 25, 2004) Iraq’s $120bn external debt is "clearly unsustainable" and creditors will need to grant reductions of almost 90 per cent, says Fitch Ratings, the rating agency, in a report published on Thursday.
African advocates to U.S.: Reduce our debt like Iraq’s
(February 20, 2004) In their financial histories, Iraq and the Democratic Republic of Congo share something in common: billions of dollars in international loans that vanished into the coffers of their former dictators, Saddam Hussein and Mobutu Sese Seko.
Firms urged to join rush for Iraqi ‘gold’
(February 19, 2004) Accountancy firms are being encouraged to set up shop in Iraq to take part in what was last week billed as a modern-day ‘gold rush’.
Ernst & Young returns to Iraq
(February 13, 2004) The new Baghdad office will be part of a grander strategy to increase Ernst & Young’s Middle East presence in a big way.
Iraq establishes commission on public integrity
(February 12, 2004) The Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) in Iraq has established a Commission on Public Integrity, which will enforce anticorruption laws and set public-service standards.
Algeria launches Iraq oil corruption probe
(February 11, 2004) Algeria is investigating alleged corruption linked to Iraq’s oil-for-food programme, state radio said, adding weight to Iraqi efforts to get to the bottom of crude dealing during Saddam Hussein’s rule.
Iraq restructures largest bank for possible sale
(February 9, 2004) Iraq’s largest bank, state-owned Al-Rafideen, plans to lay off a third of its staff and overhaul a debt-laden balance sheet to prepare for privatisation, possibly next year, the bank’s chairman said.
Reducing Iraq’s foreign debt
(February 6, 2004) How and when Argentina’s debt mess gets cleared up will have much more of an impact on the international financial system than how and when Iraq’s debt mess gets fixed. So why is the G-7 giving more attention to Iraq?
China to write-off Iraq’s debt, reopen embassy
(February 5, 2004) China on Thursday said it will write-off an undetermined amount of the debt owed by Iraq and reopen its embassy in Baghdad soon which would also help protect its interests in the multi-billion dollar reconstruction projects in the war-torn nation.
Russia hints at considerable debt reduction for Iraq
(February 5, 2004) Russia is ready to settle Iraq’s debt problem in accordance with the Paris Club rules, which may lead to a "considerable" reduction of debt for the war-ravaged country, said Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Yuri Fedotov.
Banking on empire
(February 4, 2004) Iraqi ministries will now be able to borrow billions of dollars to buy much-needed equipment from overseas suppliers, but only by mortgaging the national oil revenues through a bank managed by New York-based multinational JP Morgan Chase.
Saddam’s odious debt
(February 2, 2004) Saddam accumulated around $130 billion of unpaid debt, on top of tens of billions of war reparation, and the countries and companies he owes are seeking to extract as much money as they can and use the debt as a lever to control Iraq’s economy.
After Iraq, let’s forgive some other debts
(February 1, 2004) It is right that most of Iraq’s debt should be forgiven – but so, too, should the debt for new democracies forced to endure the hangovers from the self-aggrandizing binges of their autocratic predecessors.