Work begins on Iraq-Iran rail link

Iranian Vice President Mohammed Mokhber and Iraq’s Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani attend a ceremony on Saturday in Basra to lay the foundation stone for a railway connection project. (AFP)
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  • The project will connect port city of Basra to Iran’s vast railway network through Chalamja border crossing

BAGHDAD: Iraq’s prime minister on Saturday inaugurated construction work on what is slated to become the first railway line connecting the country to neighboring Iran, a major political and economic partner.

The “Basra-Chalamja connection project” will link the major port city of Basra in southern Iraq to Iran’s vast railway network through the Chalamja border crossing, said a Transport Ministry official.
It is estimated that the project will take “between 18 and 24 months.”
The goal is to be able to transport “travelers from Iran and Central Asian countries” to holy cities, Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani said in a speech.
He noted that the project had been under discussion for years before an agreement was reached in 2021.

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The prime minister thanked Iran for planned demining operations at the border to clear the way for the train line and for a railway bridge over the Shatt Al-Arab waterway.

During Saturday’s ceremony, Al-Sudani laid a symbolic foundation stone alongside Iran’s first vice president, Mohammed Mokhber.
Al-Sudani thanked Tehran for planned demining operations at the border to clear the way for the train line and for a railway bridge over the Shatt Al-Arab waterway, where the Tigris and Euphrates rivers converge before spilling into the Gulf.
Iraq and Iran fought an eight-year war in the 1980s after Saddam Hussein invaded his neighbor in the wake of Iran’s 1979 revolution.
Mokhber hailed the “strategic” project that he said would be completed “over the next two years,” Iranian state media reported him as saying.
Half the 32 km of rail track planned will be on the Iran side of the border, its IRNA news
agency said. War-ravaged and beset by rampant corruption, Iraq suffers from dilapidated infrastructure, including outdated highways and railways.
Al-Sudani’s government has been working on forging a growing number of regional partnerships.
In May, Baghdad unveiled a $17-billion project known as the “Route of Development” for a road and railway stretching 1,200 km from Iraq’s northern border with Turkiye to the Gulf in the south.