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Saturday, December 5, 2020

Iraqi Federation of Industries and Its Building

 

The Iraqi Federation of Industries

Al-Khullani Square Icon

By Laith Al-Himdany

Translated from Arabic by Wefa

هنا المقالة باللغة العربية




The image of the building for the Iraqi Federation of Industries at Al-Khullani Square in Baghdad, one of the masterpieces of the late architect Rifaat Al-Chadarji, has returned to the media with the news of the death of the Baghdad lover* on April 10, 2020.

Few days before the death of Rifaat Al-Chadarji, I was talking with Qahtan Al-Orfali on the phone and we were reminiscing about the magnificent building of the Union (which was considered a landmark in Baghdad), and the dire situation to which it reached after the occupation like what happened to dozens of institutions destroyed by the occupation. We remembered how the Union building was established from donations by Iraqi industrialists who saw a significant normative value** in their homeland as expressed by economist Thaer al-Dabbagh.

This issue began with the initiative of the Union’s General Secretary at the time, Dr. Muhammad Khalil al-Tawil, after obtaining the approval of the Union’s Board of Directors, which at that time occupied part of a building on Banks’ Street. I remember meeting Qahtan Al-Orfali, and at his office I met with important industrialists such as Tawfik Allawi, Ismael Al-Bahrani, Abdallah Al-Omari, Ibrahim Al-Rubaie, Yahya Thanian, Yusef Al-Haddad, Abdul-Wahab Bunniya, Yahya Al-Najjar, Adeeb Farajo, Khairallah Al-Sabbagh, and Fadel Al-Tai. Among the employees at the Union were the economic researcher Abdul Razzaq al-Rubaie, the engineer Rashid Hamid, the established journalist Qasim Muhammad Fakhri, owner of the Iraqi Economics newspaper, who was working in the Union’s Public Relations Department, and the Assistant Director (of this department) Tarik Al-Douri.

A committee was formed under the chairmanship of Muhammad Khalil al-Tawil and the membership of Ibrahim al-Rubaie, Muhammad Kafil Hussain, Abd al-Amir al-Jumaili, and Muhammad Hassan al-Qazzaz, as well as the accounts manager at that time, Qadduri Abdul Ghafour.  Few years following the donation by the Iraqi industrialists, the building was completed.


The Union moved to the new building in 1967 and since then it has been linked to my memory. Here I record the details of the establishment of laboratories, which were located on a street off Al-Zaeem^ Street (in honor of Prime Minister Abdul Karim Qasim) near the headquarters of Al-Ittihad newspaper, which I assumed responsibility for years. The initiative for the establishment of laboratories was by the President of the Union, Abdul Qadir Abdul Latif, and by a decision of the Union's Board of Directors with the support of the Ministry of Light Industries. The aim of its establishment was to provide support in the fields of product testing for small enterprises such as food laboratories, clothing and shoes industries that are not approved by industrial development and whose products are not subject to examination in the laboratories of the Central Organization for Standardization and Quality Control. They were large laboratories comparable with the Quality Control of those in Industrial countries, and were unrelated to the military industries. 



The Most Prominent Achievements of the Union

-       Organizing an expanded meeting for a group of national industry pioneers that resulted in the 1970 studies under which president Ahmed Hasan Al-Bakir announced his support for the private sector. The statement aimed to restore confidence to the investors in the industrial sector that shrank and shied away from working in this sector after the nationalization of the sixties, which included many industries including construction industries and some food industries.

-        The mechanization of brick making projects in the private sector, then transferring them to the Nahrawan complex, where the implementation of the project was supervised by Engineer Youssef Hassan Mahdi and Engineer Kamal Ahmed Agha, and was achieved in collaboration with an Italian company. Other projects, included the studies for the mechanization of plaster projects that Eng. Isa Muhammad worked on, but did not materialize due to the blockade imposed on Iraq.

-        The Union departments were like consultative bodies for the private and public sectors in Iraq, and when the Iraqi government decided to enter the car industry (as an industry, not assembly), an independent commission was established for this purpose, headed by Barraq Saeed Yahya, a professor at the University of Technology. At that time, the Union was assigned to prepare a study on the automotive feeding industries. Indeed, the Union completed one of the most important studies that dealt with the reality of the feeding industries and the possibilities for their improvement, which was completed by Eng. Youssef Hassan Mahdi in cooperation with the technical department of the Union. The study received a great attention from the International Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), which sent an expert to Iraq for assistance and support. In this study, the Union provided important information that was compiled by the Eng. Wafa Muhammad Ali. She stored, programmed and placed it at the service of the Automobile Industry Authority.

-        The Economic Department, on the initiative of its director, the economist Thaer al-Dabbagh, organized a scientific conference, the first of its kind, to support and develop small industries. Many universities and research centers contributed to it, which was accompanied by an exhibition of small industries that received the attention of the Ministry of Industry, and the recommendations of this conference were reflected on the state’s stance on these industries. A decision was issued by Iraq’s President to register most of these industries in the industrial development and grant them the necessary privileges for development.

-        Building distinguished relations with Arab and international organizations and assemblies. In its various epochs, the Union built distinguished relations at various levels and this was demonstrated by its effective role in the General Union of Arab Chambers of Commerce, Industry and Agriculture, where the Secretary General Burhan Al-Dajani paid great attention to the suggestions and nominations of the Iraqi Union, and I was a witness to that era. The influence of the Union was evident in the process of establishing Arab-foreign chambers of commerce in cooperation with the Arab Economic Council, where the Union of Iraqi Industries, in coordination with the Union of Iraqi Chambers of Commerce, was able to nominate and support a number of Iraqi competencies for these chambers such as Abdul Karim Al-Mudaris, Secretary General of the Arab-British Chamber of Commerce, Fu’ad Abdul-Hadi, Secretary General of the Arab-Italian Chamber, Nasrat Al-Mudaris, Secretary General of the Arab-German Chamber, and Eng. Rakan, Secretary General of the Arab-Irish Chamber

-       The Federation organized the largest Arab conference for coordination and integration among the Arab Gulf states in the mid-seventies. Behind the success of the conference was the president of the Union, Ghassan Marhoun. I personally worked in the preparatory association, and with me was Husam Ad-Din al-Ansari, the administrative expert at the General Organization for Textile Industries, Basim Abdul Karim from the Economic Union and a large number of employees.  Before the invasion of Kuwait, the Union had strong relations with the Arab chambers of industry and commerce, and it supported the candidacy of Mr. Kathem Abdul Hamid for the General Secretariat of the Gulf Chambers. The Union also established close relations with the chambers of Arab consultancy like the Arab Organization for Industrialization (AOI), the Gulf Organization for Industrial Consulting (GOIC), and the Arab Labor Organization (ALO), which held a conference in Baghdad, and I collaborated with some colleagues, including Shihab Al-Tamimi and Muhammad Khalaf, by issuing a daily newspaper during the conference.

-       The role of the Union was prominent in the meetings of the International Labor Organization as a representative of employers. At the beginning of the seventies, Qahtan Al-Orfali was an important member in coordinating Iraqi delegations and in the labor courts that were formed according to the conventions of the International Labor Organization (ILO) and held in Geneva.

-       At the local level, the Union was an active member in the committee that was formed upon a recommendation from the Union’s General Secretariat for the purpose of establishing private banks. It also established the second private bank, the Bank of Baghdad, which was managed by Saadoun Kubba. The Union also proposed the establishment of the stock market. It was a comprehensive proposal that received the attention of the Iraqi government. Annually, the Union continued issuing a comprehensive guide of the Iraqi industries, and it also produced an industrial survey that was supervised by Abdul Razzaq Al-Rubaie, Basim Abdul-Karim Al-Zubaidi and Hana Al-Khafaji, and I have personally been designing and following up on these publications since 1971. This survey was the source for many studies, especially the studies of protecting national production, which the Union used to contribute in their preparation. These studies were used by the Trade Regulatory Commission in determining the import rates for products that have equivalence in Iraq.

Since the establishment of the Union until I left Iraq, I kept mentioning the details of that wonderful building, which was one of the masterpieces by the late Rifaat Al-Chadarji, especially the meeting room of the Board of Directors on the top floor, and how the sun entered this room to brighten it without the need for [artificial] lighting.

 

 

* The Lover of Baghdad is Rifaat Al-Chadarji

** Or notional value

^ The Leader

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Notes:

1: This is a brief information about the status of the Iraqi Federation of Industries and its building after the USA-UK occupation of Iraq, 2003.

2. The Federation of Industries is an important developmental organization that was marginalized after the occupation and ended its role

3. Small enterprises are those not approved by the industrial development and whose number of workers does not exceed ten workers.

4. The Federation of Industries' laboratories were established in the mid of 1980s

5. Here is information about the Federation of Industries

6. The official name of the organization in English is the Iraqi Federation of Industries, but when referring to it by one term, 'federation' and 'union' are alternatively used in this translation to avoid repetition.

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Laith Al-Hamdani is an Iraqi journalist living in Canada since the mid.1990s. He began working at the Iraqi satirical magazine in the 1970s, then worked as a correspondent for Kuwaiti and Lebanese publications. In the 1970s, he was one of the founders of industrial media contributing to the publication of the "World of Industry" magazine, later called "Industry". In the mid. 1970s, he worked for "Tareeq Al Shaab" newspaper and was responsible for its technical department. In the 1980s, he published "Al-Ittihad" newspaper, which spoke for the Federation of Industries and Chambers of Commerce. Together with colleague, Ziyad Ali, he published "Al-Bilad" newspaper in Canada.