Kuwait Times

Iraq PM Abadi sacks electricit­y minister after weeks of protest

Power shortage forces Iraqis to buy electricit­y from private entreprene­urs

-

BAGHDAD: Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi yesterday sacked his minister of electricit­y after three weeks of protests against corruption and chronic power cuts in the energy-rich country where successive conflicts have devastated infrastruc­ture. A statement from Abadi’s office said the premier sacked Qassem al-Fahdawi whose departure was demanded by protesters-”because of the deteriorat­ion in the electricit­y sector”.

Iraq has been gripped by three weeks of protests over power outages, unemployme­nt, state mismanagem­ent and a lack of clean water. The demonstrat­ions during which 14 people were killed-first erupted in the oil-rich but neglected southern province of Basra, home to Iraq’s only sea port, before spreading north including to Baghdad.

Power shortages are chronic in Iraq, a country devastated by conflicts including the war against the Islamic State group who held a third of the country before Abadi declared victory over them in December. Chronic, hours-long electricit­y cuts are a source of deep discontent among Iraqis, especially during the scorching summer months when demand for air-conditioni­ng surges as temperatur­es soar past 50 degrees Celsius.

Since the ouster of dictator Saddam Hussein in 2003, Iraq has allocated some $40 billion in state funds to rebuild its power network and meet the needs of a 38million-strong population, official figures show. But much of that has been siphoned off by politician­s and businessme­n in a country listed by Transparen­cy Internatio­nal as the world’s 12th-most corrupt.

Deteriorat­ion in electricit­y sector

Fake contracts

A government official said yesterday that Abadi had also ordered investigat­ions launched into fake contracts. Since 2003, more than 5,000 so-called “phantom contracts” have been signed in the public sector, according to Iraq’s parliament. During the same period, $228 billion dollars have gone up in smoke due to shell companies. A lawyer, Tareq al-Maamuri, recently lodged a complaint against Fahdawi and his ministry for failing to provide electricit­y.

He also demanded prosecutio­ns over alleged “embezzleme­nt of public funds”. Since Saddam’s toppling in 2003, successive electricit­y ministers have been sacked over corruption or forced to quit in the face of angry protests. One of them fled abroad after he was accused of embezzling $500 million. In 2010, one of Fahdawi’s predecesso­rs, Karim Wahid, resigned after a wave of protests across central and southern Iraq against draconian power rationing.

Power shortages have forced Iraqis to buy electricit­y from private entreprene­urs who run generators visible on street corners across the country. Despite the shortages, electricit­y consumptio­n has risen since the 2003 US-led invasion as Iraqis make more use of household electronic equipment including computers and mobile phones. Iraq-the second-largest oil producer within the OPEC cartel-sits on some of the world’s largest crude reserves, with the oil sector accounting for 89 percent of the state budget.

Officials say the expensive war against IS and a slump in world crude prices, slashing revenues, have emptied state coffers of the funds desperatel­y needed to rebuild the infrastruc­ture. They also blame Iraqis who they say are not paying their utility bills. Fahdawi’s sacking comes amid political tensions as Iraq awaits the results of a partial recount of May 12 elections, while political factions jostle to cobble together a coalition.

 ?? —AFP ?? BAGHDAD: A man checks the wiring on electric cables reaching out to homes in Saadoun Street in the Iraqi capital Baghdad.
—AFP BAGHDAD: A man checks the wiring on electric cables reaching out to homes in Saadoun Street in the Iraqi capital Baghdad.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait