Liberating Iraq- Unemployment at 70%

iVillage Member
Registered: 03-24-2004
Liberating Iraq- Unemployment at 70%
3
Wed, 07-21-2004 - 10:41pm
But let us remind the Iraqis that Sadaam is gone now. You would think that would cheer them up, it makes many Americans happy.

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/A66151CB-2105-418B-BFAA-73211A631611.htm

Iraqi unemployment rate reaches 70%

By Ahmed Janabi

Wednesday 21 July 2004, 9:03 Makka Time, 6:03 GMT



Unemployed Iraqis protesting in front of the US embassy



A study by the college of economics at Baghdad University has found that the unemployment rate in Iraq is 70%.


The study says the problem of high unemployment is going from bad to worse, with the security situation deterioriating and the reconstruction process faltering.

Private employment agencies - a new phenomenon in post-Saddam Iraq - are cropping up across the country and advertising their "services" through the mass media.

Promising job opportunities in Libya and Arab Gulf states, these advertisements have aroused a mixture of interest, distrust and resentment.

Long queues of Iraqis can be seen every morning outside the advertisers' offices, carrying their CVs and the $50 application fee.

Guidelines introduced by the private employment offices state that every applicant must pay $50, with just half the amount refundable should the agency fail to get the applicant a job .

Easy money

Abd Al-Hamid Abd, a Baghdad resident, said he submitted his application despite warnings from his friends.

"All the people I know who have applied said they were contacted and told that their applications were unsuccessful," he said.



Fly-by-night agencies are ripping

off desperate Iraqi job seekers



"They suspected that keeping 50% of the applicants' fees was the main objective of the agencies, but I applied anyway. I have to believe in anyone who offers me hope."

Several residents of Baghdad told Aljazeera.net they had heard of employment agencies offering jobs within Iraq, but not outside the country.

In most cases, these offices offer jobs with the US occupation authorities and companies linked to them. Some Iraqis have no problems working for the Americans, while others reject the idea.

"I was offered more than four jobs, but all of them were either with US forces and authorities, or with companies associated with them. I cannot work in these positions," Nasrin al-Agha of Baghdad said.

"Not everyone is willing to risk his life for the sake of making a living. What do my children gain if I am killed in one of those attacks on a US installation?"

Dilemma

Ala al-Qaisi, 56, a father of three who fought in the Iran-Iraq war, expressed disappointment with the fact that all the jobs seemed to be in the hands of the US authorities.

"I cannot accept a job with the US authorities or a company which supplies them. I care about my image in the eyes of my children. After defending Iraq for eight years, how can I accept work with a country that is militarily occupying the country I fought for?"

"I cannot see my children starve. If those who are claiming to be patriotic really care for us, let them pay us salaries and we will not go to work with the

US occupation"

Lamya al-Tahir, a resident of Baghdad



Lamya al-Tahir, a 48-year-old engineer, offered a different perspective. She said working with the foreigners to earn a living did not necessarily mean treason.

"My husband's salary covers less than half of our needs. How can we feed our children? I cannot see my children starve. If those who are claiming to be patriotic really care for us, let them pay us salaries and we will not go to work with the US occupation," she said.

The number of people out of work in Iraq has been on the rise since the then US administrator Paul Bremer disbanded the Iraqi army, security organisations and the Ministry of Information - a decision that made hundreds of thousands of people unemployed at the stroke of a pen.

iVillage Member
Registered: 04-22-2003
Thu, 07-22-2004 - 4:19pm
Really sad situtation. Considering the fact that Iraq was not responsible for 9/11, no significant link to Alqaida and no WMD. I am sure they feel great deal of injustice and frustrations in their heart.
iVillage Member
Registered: 03-24-2004
Thu, 07-22-2004 - 9:01pm
Yeah it is a sad situation in Iraq. The Iraqis basically are being forced either not to have a job because either they are not skilled or no jobs available, or to take jobs that has proven to get alot of Iraqis killed. What is worse is that women are even worse now than when Sadaam was in power. Prostitution does not count as a career move, which is the only job they have available to them now.

It is proven when people are not working and are not able to provide for their families, they just want to hurt others. If anyone doesnt beleive me just look at Palestine with unemployment at around 60%+, inner city unemployment rates, and watch how crime climbs when our unemployment rate rises. Honestly, who would want to work for the very people that bombed your house and killed your family? American companies see $$$$$-- cheap labor. Who says this was not a profitable war? ;-)

iVillage Member
Registered: 04-08-2003
Fri, 07-23-2004 - 12:31pm
Well, let's give them jobs the Good ol' American way: Send the good middle-class white collar jobs overseas never to return, open lots of walmarts and give them a glutton of minimum wage/service level jobs.

Or we can call their cooking jobs in restaurants: Manufacturing jobs.