|
|

|
|

5 August 2003
Weekly
Update
Education
and Agriculture Will Benefit From
New Funding Approvals for Iraq
The
Security Council 661 Committee this week agreed to a request from
the Office of the Iraq Programme to fund text book production for
5.5 million Iraqi students and 25,000 teacher trainees in the
2003/2004 academic year. The $72.3 million project submitted by
UNICEF, the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), and interim Iraqi
Ministries of Education and Higher Education, aims to print more
than 66 million copies of newly edited primary, intermediate,
preparatory and vocational textbooks for nationwide distribution.
As
much printing as possible will be done inside Iraq to boost local
capacity and job opportunities. In past years, the Ministry of
Education recycled 50 per cent of the nation’s textbooks each year
and printed just 10 per cent of the new stock locally.
Most
of Iraq’s existing textbooks and education resources were looted
or burned following the war. Adding to the replacement challenge for
2003/2004, is a decision to edit propagandist statements from school
texts without changing the educational content. Some 509 titles are
up for replacement this year.
Boost
for Agriculture
Also
approved this week were:
-
a $104.1 million project submitted by FAO, the CPA and the
Interim Ministry of Agriculture for fertilizer for Iraq’s winter
wheat and barley crops; and
-
$6.8 million for fungicides to control ‘smut’ - a disease
affecting wheat and barley seeds.
Fertilizer:
The import of 140,000 metric tonnes of di-ammonium phosphate and
350,000 metric tonnes of urea was approved to cover for the
inability of national factories to meet demand due to shortages of
natural gas, spare parts and skilled manpower.
Fungicide:
Wheat and barley are Iraq’s most important food crops. Both are
vulnerable to fungus and crop losses ranging from 10 to 30 per cent
if seeds are not treated. Flour produced from infected grain is grey
in colour and contains toxins that make it unfit for human
consumption. In past years, Iraqi farmers were given treated seeds
as well as fungicides to cover any additional needs. However the war
disrupted their supply lines. The urgent import of 375 metric tonnes
of fungicide will enable the Ministry of Agriculture to treat some
250,000 metric tonnes of seed - about 70 per cent of the total –
for the coming season. The treated seeds will be distributed to some
520,000 farm families and is expected to boost their total wheat and
barley output by up to 125,000 metric tonnes, valued at about $12
million.
Funding
Approvals
This
week’s approvals flow from weekly meetings of UN and Iraqi experts
and advisors from the CPA. The adoption of Security Council
resolution 1483 (22 May) provides for the prioritization of goods
and supplies considered by all parties to have “relative
utility” based on preliminary assessments of Iraq’s needs.
The
meetings have so far produced a list of 2,061 prioritized contracts
valued at almost $3.4 billion for early delivery. In addition to
agriculture and education needs, the prioritized contracts so far
include machinery, vehicles, spare parts, and medicines for the
health, water and sanitation, electricity, telecommunication and oil
sectors.
Food
basket
Food
ration deliveries into Iraq from regional hubs and from the Port of
Umm Qasr totaled 386,020 metric tonnes in July, bringing the level
of total dispatches since April to 1.6 million metric tonnes. Prior
to the war, some 60 per cent of the population were dependent on the
monthly food ration ‘basket’.
Additional information is available from the website
of the Office of the Iraq Programme. For further information
please contact Ian Steele email: steelei@un.org
|
|