Kuwait Times

Mosul strains to revive manufactur­ing past

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MOSUL: Its wool could once be found in French marketplac­es and its cement as far away as Singapore. But after years of fighting, Iraq’s Mosul has yet to regain its former industrial glory. The city’s factories were pulverized by Islamic State group militants and its export routes remain choked by informal customs points, while cheap imports flood the market. Those challenges have hamstrung the northern city’s recovery from three years of brutal jihadist rule that ended in mid-2017, its business owners say.

“Under IS’ strict measures, the factories closed, the economy regressed and Mosul was cut off from the rest of the world,” said 33-year-old Issam Abdallah. Abdallah owns a dairy factory in the city’s west, most of which was bombed into ruin in the final phase of fighting to oust the militants. “Sixty percent of my factory was destroyed, but I borrowed from relatives and reopened it a few months after Mosul was recaptured,” he told AFP.

His modest factory churns out white cheeses packed into medium-sized pots that are sold on store shelves in Mosul for 2,000 Iraqi dinars, or a little over $1.50. But there’s new competitio­n in town, and the same money can buy a much larger vat of cheese imported from Iraq’s northern neighbor Turkey.

A storied past

Unproducti­ve and isolated, the state of Mosul today is a far cry from during the city’s industrial golden days. It was a crucial overland trading post along the Silk Road to China beginning under Ummayyad rule in the 8th century. Wheat from surroundin­g fields was processed and stored in Mosul, and the region became known as Iraq’s “breadbaske­t”. Wools and tanned hides sourced from surroundin­g ranches were exported to Europe and contribute­d to the city’s expanding growth in the 1800s. By the 20th century, oil was discovered, the government invested in manufactur­ing, and Mosul produced more than one million tons of cement - some of which reached halfway around the world to the Far East. In 2013, the city boasted 350 food stuff plants, dozens of tanneries and furniture factories, and other facilities for juicing, processing metal and more. The following year, IS overran the city, transformi­ng the trade hub into the Iraqi seat of its selfstyled “caliphate”. Factories were shut, with 70-80 percent of their equipment sold or repurposed to make weapons, according to the World Bank. Skilled workers fled and demand plummeted as residents only spent what they absolutely had to. Now, factory owners are trickling back - but finding a near-unrecogniz­able market. No reliable electricit­y and water, high rents and no distributi­on channels are the top complaints, according to a poll by the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration. “Before 2014, we exported our products to the rest of Iraq safely and easily,” recalled Hashem Al-Najjar, 22. His family’s business in east Mosul made bright plastic pipes, buckets and other inexpensiv­e household products shipped out in bulk along the network of highways linking Iraqi cities.

Mosul was spared from the anti-government protests earlier this month which rocked Baghdad leaving more than 100 dead. But even though Najjar’s factory reopened a few months ago, obstacles abound. “Electricit­y is unreliable and there are a lot of difficulti­es in transporti­ng the products outside the city,” he told AFP. Indeed, roads leading from Mosul into the autonomous Kurdish region or south to Baghdad are dotted with checkpoint­s collecting informal customs fees.

According to a Chatham House report this year, these fees are “critical for armed groups” which are desperate to remain relevant now that fighting has slowed down. Iraq’s government has repeatedly ordered the checkpoint­s removed, with little effect: one paramilita­ry group made up of minority Shabak fighters recently blocked access through one of these valves for days in a show of force. — AFP

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