Last month, Iraq’s central bank said the OPEC member was in talks with six or seven foreign banks, among them Iranian and Lebanese lenders, which are interested in entering the country despite insurgent attacks.
Among the applicants are Iranian lenders Karafarin Bank and Bank Parsian, which want to set up shop in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, said Waleed Eedi, acting director-general of banking supervision at the Iraqi central bank.
Shiite power Iran has strong political and economic ties with neighboring Iraq with its Shiite majority.
But due to a new round of UN sanctions, the central bank had asked the Foreign Ministry and council of ministers for guidance.
“No approval has been made so far,” Eedi told Reuters. “We are awaiting a reply from them (foreign ministry) and I, personally, expect that their reply will be a no.”
The United Nations and the European Union have imposed new restrictions on Iran over its nuclear enrichment activities, which the West fears could lead it to make a bomb. The sanctions focus on the country’s banking and energy sectors.
Iraq is trying to attract foreign investment to develop its infrastructure and diversify the oil-dependent economy but many firms are waiting for security to improve.
Iraq unlikely to allow Iranian banks due to sanctions
Publication Date:
Mon, 2010-08-02 00:41
Taxonomy upgrade extras:
© 2024 SAUDI RESEARCH & PUBLISHING COMPANY, All Rights Reserved And subject to Terms of Use Agreement.