http://www.tehrantimes.com/NCms/2007.asp?code=213585 

 

China cancels 80% of Iraq debt

BAGHDAD (AFP) - China has agreed to cancel 80 percent of the 8.5-billion-dollar 
debt it is owed by Iraq, the finance ministry in Baghdad said in an official 
statement on Tuesday. 


It said a bilateral agreement was signed in Beijing, without specifying the 
date, and that China's ambassador to Iraq had met officials in Baghdad to 
confirm the agreement. 

The statement added that the two countries entered into trade deals valued at 
3.8 billion dollars in 2009. 

In Beijing, foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu told AFP "China and Iraq have 
reached an agreement not long ago... to substantially cancel the debts Iraq 
owes to Chinese companies." 

"China has long been assisting Iraq to realize stability and development by 
offering aid, cutting debts and helping its economic restoration," he said in a 
faxed statement. 

Beijing "exempted in 2007 all the debts Iraq owed to the Chinese government," 
the statement added, without giving specific figures. 

State-owned Chinese oil firm CNPC has clinched some of the biggest deals in the 
Iraqi oil sector since the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in 
2003. 

It was the leading member of a successful consortium bidding for the Halfaya 
field in southern Iraq in December. 

The Chinese firm had already signed a deal last year, along with Britain's BP, 
to ramp up production at Iraq's biggest oil field, Rumaila. 

Those two deals are in addition to a contract signed in 2008 by CNPC to develop 
another oil field south of Baghdad, giving it a major presence among foreign 
energy firms operating in the conflict-wracked country. 

Photo: Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu, seen here on March 10, 
2009, told AFP China and Iraq have reached an agreement to substantially cancel 
the debts Iraq owes to Chinese companies. (AP photo) 



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