House prices on the up and increased banking business
are not readily associated with Iraq. Yet as Humphrey
Hawksley reports, there are entrepreneurs who see good
times in the horizon.
"This is the entrance hall," said Naimah Abdul Jabbah,
throwing open a huge pair of wooden double doors.
"How much?", I asked.
"$1m. Maybe some negotiation. But $1m, I reckon."
He turned to my interpreter to confirm the dollar
exchange rate to the dinar, because in recent months
Iraq's currency has been creeping up in value.
Business playground
Naimah, in his early 40s, is a leading Iraqi estate
agent.
He took over the business from his father and talks
of the glory days of the 1980s when Iraq dreamt of
becoming a business centre and a playground of the
Middle East.
He now sees a glimpse of the good times coming back
again.
We were in a large detached house in a fashionable
Baghdad suburb, standing under a dust-caked chandelier
and next to floor-to-ceiling windows with the top half
blocked out in case of a rocket attack or bombing.
"Since the drop in violence," I asked "how much have
prices gone up?"
Dubai prices
"10%-12%."
He reached for his ringing mobile phone and switched
to Arabic.
"I'm with some people now, but I can make it at
1300," he said, fixing up his next meeting.
Then, he picked up where we left off, "I'm told our
prices are reaching those in Dubai."
"But they don't get bombed in Dubai."
"I know," he said amid peels of laughter.
"But Iraq, it's a beautiful place. Many people want
to be here."
Just over a year ago, President George W Bush confounded
his Iraq war critics by sending more troops to the
country, instead of withdrawing them as much of America
was demanding.
The plan is called the "surge" and in the past few
months, its impact is being felt.
US and newly-trained Iraqi troops go into
neighbourhoods, drive out insurgents, stay there, win
round the local people and begin development programmes.
It is not all working. Bombers slip through.
There are daily killings. This is a country still
very much at war.
But amid it, many Iraqis have a new spring in their
step.
Buoyant prices
Buoyant property prices might be one result, just as
the jumping, bustling shopping streets in central
Baghdad are another - often so packed that you have to
jostle your way through, past clothes stalls, shops of
electronic gadgets and trolleys brimming with bright,
fresh fruit.
Some of those oranges, bananas, apricots and apples
find their way into the window display of the MeshMesha
fruit juice and pastry bar run by Ahmed Sabah and his
extended family.
Young nephews and cousins, dressed in smart, orange,
sports shirts with the MeshMesha logo - which actually
means Apricot - blend delicious drinks of fresh fruit
for a steady stream of customers - Sunni, Shia, Kurds,
Christians.
No-one seems to care as they sit at minimalist tables
watching the world go by.
"When it's safe outside, of course business is
better," said Ahmed.
"I have four branches - one we've had to close
because it was in a violent neighbourhood, but once the
war is over we can spread the chain throughout Iraq."
The MeshMesha chain supports five families that
between them are raising 25 children still at school and
it employs a couple of dozen of its youngsters in the
fruit juice bars.
Return of the ATM?
Without work and a sense of the future, many young
men head off to join a militia.
"Your money," I asked. "Do you keep it in cash, put
it in the bank? How does that work?"
"In a bank," said Ahmed. "And we exchange some into
US dollars."
One of Iraq's biggest private banks has a luxuriously
designed office above the Baghdad Stock Exchange and I
asked a senior executive how business was now compared
to those glory days of the 1980s that Naimah, the estate
agent, had spoken about.
"People didn't trust the banks, then," said the
financier Mohammed Issa.
His accent was East Coast American and he wore a
brown suit with a brightly coloured open-necked shirt.
He would have a panoramic view across Baghdad except
the window was blocked by glass cabinets with ornamental
displays - again to shield against a bomb attack.
"We had, maybe 4,000 clients under Saddam. Now we
have 50,000," he explained.
"We've just set up Internet banking so our customers
don't have to risk getting bombed by going to a
branch.". He paused for a moment. "Yes, once the war's
over, we'll have our ATM machines throughout the
country."
Check-point fear
In the afternoon we were driving back to the office
past what we thought was a routine check-point.
A van had been stopped.
Men in military uniforms waved guns holding open the
vehicle's sliding door.
People were shouting. The expression of those in the
van were of anger, anxiety and fear.
"What's happening there?" I asked our interpreter.
"I don't know." He shrugged. "It looks like the army,
but I think it's a militia."
"What might happen to them."
"I don't know," he said sombrely.
There are glimpses of hope in Iraq, but at the moment
only glimpses.
From Our Own Correspondent was broadcast on
Saturday, 12 January, 2008 at 1130 GMT on BBC Radio 4.
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programme schedules for World Service transmission
times.