07 November 2012
BAGHDAD / Aswat al-Iraq: The Iraqi government has received the Kuwaiti emir's ratification of the Iraqi airline dispute settlements, the transport ministry said on Wednesday. "The Transport Ministry will start implementing the agreement through opening a bank account to deposit the first transfer of the debt," the ministry's undersecretary said. Kuwait had said that Iraq will complete payment of a $500 million settlement of an airline dispute between the two nations by the middle of next year. 

A royal decree ratifying the settlement signed by Kuwait Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad Al-Sabah states that Baghdad will pay $200 million in the first six months of 2013. The remaining $300 million will be deposited in a special bank account and transferred to state-owned Kuwait Airways Corp. The decree said the deal between the two neighbours' airlines was signed in Kuwait City in July and officially ends a 22-year old dispute which began after Iraqi troops invaded Kuwait in 1990. The settlement amounts to less than half of the $1.2 billion Kuwait Airways had said Iraq's flag carrier owed it.

Kuwait says 10 of its planes as well as aircraft parts were plundered after its airport was seized during the invasion. The Kuwaiti decree is effective from the day it is published in the official gazette, though under the emirate's constitution, the next parliament, due to be elected on December 1, has the right to reject it. An Iraqi Foreign Ministry statement had said that the decree ''cancels all restrictions and complications in rebuilding Iraqi Airways, and it is now free to buy new planes and build a fleet.'' Several outstanding issues are still to be sorted out between the two Arab neighbors including the payment by Baghdad of around $20 billion in war reparations and about $16 billion in debt. 

© Aswat Aliraq 2012