Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Job fair offers hope to unemployed youth in Mosul

- MOSUL / AFP

IN AN Iraqi province where unemployme­nt is about 40%, a lucky few hoped to find work yesterday at a university job fair attended by French firms alongside local companies.

The three-day event is taking place at the University of Mosul in Iraq’s war-ravaged second city, where reconstruc­tion has been slow five years after the Iraqi army, backed by U.S.-led coalition airstrikes, pushed out Daesh terrorists.

Laith Abdallah, 24, was among dozens of students wandering on the campus lawn among stands set up by about 40 companies, most of them locally based but including Carrefour and Schneider Electric from France.

Abdallah said he’d been looking for work since 2019 when he graduated in petroleum engineerin­g. “Our number increases each day and the opportunit­ies are rare,” he said of the unemployed. “A young person has to get married and help his parents.”

Statistics from Nineveh province, of which Mosul is the capital, say unemployme­nt is around 40% generally and 20% for those aged 24-45.

Joblessnes­s is similarly high elsewhere in the country, which is trying to move past decades of war but is hobbled by corruption and other problems sparking a youth-led protest movement in 2019. “Unemployme­nt is perhaps the ogre that devours the dreams of the young,” said Qussay alAhmad, president of the University of Mosul.

Ahmad hoped that the job fair would lead to “employment opportunit­ies for hundreds of young people.”

Mustafa Aziz, 26, is among those fortunate to already be working. He hoped to recruit graduates with expertise in renewable energy or electrical engineerin­g for his seven-member team at Mosul Solar. “We need specific competence and expertise,” he said.

The job fair is part of a project called Yanhad, financed by France and the European Union, Jeremie Pellet, director-general of Expertise France, told Agence France-Presse (AFP) over the phone.

“This fits into our perspectiv­e of looking for future prospects and diversific­ation of the private sector economy for Iraqi youth,” said Pellet.

Yanhad had already supported a business “incubator” that has trained about 320 young people in entreprene­urship and financed a dozen startups, Pellet said.

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