U.S. newspaper: KRG sees great economic boom
07:54:15 / 04/2013
Khandan - newspaper (The Washington Post) U.S., on Monday, that the Kurdistan region is witnessing an economic boom and democratic check to his countrymen more prosperity.
The newspaper said in a report, that the Kurdish economy is growing by 11% annually, which urged foreign investors to visit the region through new international airports in order to invest in all sectors, especially in the oil sector.
The newspaper pointed out that a delegation composed of officials of the Government of Iraq's Kurdistan visited Washington last week for talks on the current situation of their country after ten years after the war the U.S. at Iraq.
She said: "The story is great for the Kurds, who do not belong to the Arab nation and a population around 30 million people have been deprived of a homeland and lived dispersed in Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Syria, lies in that they are on the verge of exceeding their long bitter victims and hostages in the region."
The newspaper said the U.S., "that the Kurds have suffered over twenty-five years of chemical weapons attacks that was waged by the regime of President Saddam Hussein, also suffered from the arrests at the hands of the Turkish authorities."
The American newspaper went on to say: The data geopolitics in the Middle East, which has long worked against the Kurds, are now working with them.
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07:54:15 / 04/2013
Khandan - newspaper (The Washington Post) U.S., on Monday, that the Kurdistan region is witnessing an economic boom and democratic check to his countrymen more prosperity.
The newspaper said in a report, that the Kurdish economy is growing by 11% annually, which urged foreign investors to visit the region through new international airports in order to invest in all sectors, especially in the oil sector.
The newspaper pointed out that a delegation composed of officials of the Government of Iraq's Kurdistan visited Washington last week for talks on the current situation of their country after ten years after the war the U.S. at Iraq.
She said: "The story is great for the Kurds, who do not belong to the Arab nation and a population around 30 million people have been deprived of a homeland and lived dispersed in Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Syria, lies in that they are on the verge of exceeding their long bitter victims and hostages in the region."
The newspaper said the U.S., "that the Kurds have suffered over twenty-five years of chemical weapons attacks that was waged by the regime of President Saddam Hussein, also suffered from the arrests at the hands of the Turkish authorities."
The American newspaper went on to say: The data geopolitics in the Middle East, which has long worked against the Kurds, are now working with them.
[You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]