(October 18, 2003) Independent agency will oversee reconstruction spending.
US companies to be big gainers from Iraq outlay
(October 17, 2003) Much of the US financial contribution to Iraqi reconstruction will be earmarked for American companies, according to the top international official at the US Treasury.
Iraq’s debt to Bulgaria to be ‘paid off with oil’
(October 16, 2003) Iraq’s debt to Bulgaria would most probably be paid off through its oil, US Congressman James Sensenbrenner said to Bulgaria’s Parliamentary Speaker Ognyan Gerdjikov.
UN backs Iraq resolution
(October 16, 2003) The resolution confirms that for the time being the Coalition Provisional Authority will remain the over-arching power in Iraq, but stresses the transfer of sovereignty and government back to the Iraqi people as soon as practicable.
Freeing Iraq of its ‘odious debts’
(October 9, 2003) Believe it or not, there is a Web site, sponsored by a Canadian organization, called odiousdebts.org. It focuses on a question generally thought to be just over the horizon of public interest, but no longer.
Iraqi people: why should Iraq pay Saddam’s bills?
(October 6, 2003) Arguably, every cent being claimed is a result of Saddam’s economic mismanagement and warmongering, which not only failed to benefit the Iraqi people but also caused them great suffering.
Consultation with Iraqi leaders: week one
(October 5, 2003) One of Iraq’s leading Sunni clerics told us that the longest verse in the Qu’ran concerns debt justice, and quoted an old Arabic proverb "When a camel falls to the ground, the knives are many."
Iraqi funding bill is kept intact
(October 1, 2003) If our European allies lent billions of dollars to Saddam Hussein, let them go collect from Saddam Hussein, said California Republican, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher.
Debt-relief proposal for Iraq receives a frosty reception
(September 30, 2003) A bipartisan congressional proposal to forgive the – odious debt – racked up by the former Iraqi regime is encountering resistance from two political entities that rarely find themselves in agreement: the House Democratic leadership and the White House.
US call to drop Iraq debt angers Kuwait
(September 29, 2003) Kuwaiti parliamentarians reacted angrily to a US suggestion the country drop demands for billions of dollars in war reparations owed by former foe Iraq, newspapers said yesterday.
US call to drop Iraq debt angers Kuwait MPs
(September 29, 2003) Kuwaiti parliamentarians reacted angrily to a US suggestion the country drop demands for billions of dollars in war reparations owed by former foe Iraq, newspapers said yesterday.
World Bank/IMF meeting focus on Iraq
(September 25, 2003) World Bank President James Wolfensohn told reporters that U.S.-published estimates ranging from $50 billion-$70 billion for Iraq’s reconstruction effort were "in the ball park."
Bremer seeks funds for Iraqi power grid
(September 25, 2003) “Think of what we would be asking Iraqis were we to suggest they fashion a new economy, a new democracy, while literally in the dark eight hours a day.” -L. Paul Bremer, administrator of the Coalition Provisional Authority.
Administration’s $87 billion Iraq plan hits more turbulence in Congress
(September 24, 2003) Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Calif., said the result of the administration’s proposal would be for U.S. taxpayers to help repay debt that Saddam Hussein owed to European nations before his government was toppled.
Toppling of Saddam leaves debt questions to be solved
(September 24, 2003) Policymakers and debt watchers are considering a scheme that two economists have drawn up to eliminate lending to odious regimes, such as Saddam Hussein’s Iraq.


