Kuwait Times

NGOs pledge $330m as Iraq seeks $90bn for reconstruc­tion

Urgent funds needed to restore basic infrastruc­ture, services

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KUWAIT: Iraq needs nearly $90 billion to rebuild after three years of war with the Islamic State group, officials said yesterday, with large parts of the country in ruins and tens of thousands left homeless. As a threeday internatio­nal reconstruc­tion conference got underway in Kuwait, officials were seeking pledges from donors and investors to restore Iraq’s devastated homes, schools, hospitals and economic infrastruc­ture.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was joining the conference after holding talks yesterday in Cairo, where he launched his latest Middle East tour. The State Department has said it will not be making “direct contributi­ons” to finance the reconstruc­tion efforts but that over 150 American companies would travel to Kuwait as part of its private sector drive for the conference. Baghdad declared victory against IS in December, after Iraqi forces, backed by a US-led coalition, regained control of the large parts of the country seized by the group in mid-2014.

Aid groups made pledges of $330 million on the first day of the conference, but officials said much more was needed. Planning Minister Salman Al-Jumaili said an assessment by Iraqi and internatio­nal experts put reconstruc­tion costs at $88.2 billion. “The funds will be initially used to reintegrat­e displaced people and also for rebuilding the infrastruc­ture of public services,” the minister told AFP.

Mustafa Al-Hiti, the head of Iraq’s reconstruc­tion fund, said some work had started but that funds were needed urgently to restore basic infrastruc­ture and services in many provinces. “What we have accomplish­ed is less than one percent of what Iraq needs,” Hiti said. “We have more than 138,000 houses damaged, more than half this number completely destroyed,” Hiti said, adding that more than 2.5 million Iraqis are still displaced.

After suffering a humiliatin­g defeat at the hands of IS, Iraqi forces regrouped with foreign help, eventually forcing the jihadists out of its territory including second city Mosul. But the fight-back left much of the country devastated. In Mosul, entire city blocks were reduced to rubble. The IS takeover also dealt a heavy blow to Iraq’s economy. The country sits on some of the world’s largest crude reserves, which Baghdad puts at 153 billion barrels, but the war and a slump in world prices have diminished its oil revenues.

Raja Rehan Arshad of the World Bank said investment is required across sectors, with more than $17.4 billion needed for housing alone. Nearly $30 billion is needed to restore energy and industrial infrastruc­ture, he said. The conference brings together hundreds of representa­tives of countries, aid groups, UN agencies and corporatio­ns. The $330 million pledged by non-government­al organizati­ons yesterday included $130 million from the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross.

A number of Kuwaiti NGOs made pledges worth $122.5 million, and the rest came from NGOs from Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Iraq and Britain. The UN refugee agency said the conference offered a “unique opportunit­y” to help displaced Iraqis rebuild their lives. “Sustainabl­e return is not just about bricks and mortar,” Bruno Geddo, UNHCR’s representa­tive in Iraq, said in a statement. “Rebuilding and restoring communitie­s is a complex effort, covering everything from clearing explosive hazards to repairing damage to infrastruc­ture to restoring basic services, and facilitati­ng social cohesion so that communitie­s can again begin to flourish.”

UN agencies UNICEF and UN-Habitat called for urgent investment to restore basic infrastruc­ture and services for children and families. “Violence may have subsided in Iraq, but it has upended the lives of millions across the country, leaving one in four children in poverty and pushing families to extreme measures to survive,” they said in a joint statement. The World Health Organizati­on called for investment in hospitals and other medical facilities, pointing to more than 14 hospitals and 170 health facilities destroyed.

Today, the conference will focus on private sector investment while tomorrow, national leaders are expected to announce government­al aid packages. French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, whose country is a key member of the anti-IS coalition, visited Iraq yesterday ahead of attending the conference. “I have come to tell you of France’s support and to accompany you. We will always be there. We were there to participat­e in the coalition. We will also be there in the reconstruc­tion phase,” Le Drian said after landing in Baghdad.

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