Kuwait Times

Iraqi protesters’ ire at Iran extends to goods boycott

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KARBALA: Anger over Iran’s strangleho­ld on Baghdad’s political system has helped propel an unpreceden­ted protest movement - and now Iraqi activists are hitting the Islamic Republic where it hurts, with a goods boycott. Tehran has held enormous sway over its neighbor since dictator Saddam Hussein was toppled by a US-led invasion in 2003. And that influence has spilled over into the commercial arena, with exports from Iran to Iraq ten times those moving in the opposite direction.

Using the slogan “let them rot”, protesters who have taken to the streets since Oct 1 to demand wholesale political change are now shunning everything Iranian from fruit to sugary drinks. For 24-year-old protester Hatem Karim, the boycott kills two birds with one stone. “It allows us to create jobs for Iraqis and means our money stays in the country”, he told AFP.

There are even hopes the boycott could help revive domestic industry, battered by forty years of intermitte­nt war, a decade of sanctions under Saddam, and ineffectua­l policy since the invasion. “We must boycott all foreign goods to support our own national production”, Karim urged. Impromptu open air markets at protest encampment­s have stands offering “Made in Iraq” goods to patriotic consumers, in a country where one in four young people are jobless.

Only Turkey exports more to Iraq than Iran, which sends products including cars, dairy and fresh produce, amounting to a total annual value of around $9 billion. Iraq is the OPEC cartel’s second biggest oil producer, but more than half of all hydrocarbo­n revenues have been syphoned off by crooked politician­s and their cronies under recent administra­tions. The private sector is almost non-existent and industry is on its knees, with the non-oil trade balance in heavy deficit.

Numerous factories that shut during the 1990s trade embargo or because of war - the latest devastatin­g conflict came against Islamic State militants from 2014 to late 2017 - have simply never reopened. Iraqi factories lack the capacity to supply national demand, warns economist Ahmad Tabaqchali at the Institute of Regional and Internatio­nal Studies in Sulaymaniy­ah. “Either they are too small, or they are not profitable”, because there is no private sector to cover the basic needs of 40 million Iraqis. “Nearly everything is imported”, he told AFP.

And if the boycott of Iranian goods escalates, the main beneficiar­y will not be Iraqi industry, he says. Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Jordan will likely gain the most. Amman recently signed an agreement with Baghdad exempting taxes on the export of some products. Local producers are demanding the state drasticall­y increase import taxes to protect them. They complain they cannot compete with Iran, whose exports have received support from a currency that has been in free-fall since the US reimposed sanctions last year.

But the young protesters are determined to direct their apparently boundless energy into changing all that. They have launched Facebook groups and film adverts for locally produced fizzy drinks with sparkling studio quality. “We want a renaissanc­e at all levels, including trade”, says one protester. In the Shiite holy city of Karbala, some 100 km south of Baghdad, Bassem Zakri looks at yoghurts and white cheeses leaving his factory’s production line. The increasing­ly revered words “Made in Iraq” appear on each pot. Production has increased five-fold since the start of the protests on October 1, reaching forty tonnes per day, he said. — AFP

 ??  ?? Palestinia­n fishermen retrieve their fishing nets back from the Mediterran­ean Sea at sunset in Gaza City on Monday. — AFP
Palestinia­n fishermen retrieve their fishing nets back from the Mediterran­ean Sea at sunset in Gaza City on Monday. — AFP
 ??  ?? KARBALA: An Iraqi protester flashes the victory gesture while standing by a makeshift roadblock in this central Iraqi holy shrine city yesterday. — AFP
KARBALA: An Iraqi protester flashes the victory gesture while standing by a makeshift roadblock in this central Iraqi holy shrine city yesterday. — AFP

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