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"During the last elections, they promised to change everything, but they didn't honor their word and instead they focused first on lining their pockets, then those of their aides," said Jassim Riadh Mohammed, a 43-year-old supermarket owner. Mohammed won't be voting for al-Maliki. Al-Maliki also faces sharp competition in the south from rival Shiite parties, some of which harshly criticized his oil deals. The Sadrist party, loyal to radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, Fadhila Party and nationalist Iraqis, accused him of surrendering the nation's oil wealth to international companies. Al-Maliki is hoping the promise from Basra's giant oil fields will be enough to win over voters. But years of neglect weigh heavily on that possibility. About 60 kilometers (38 miles) northwest of Basra, roaring flames billow from Rumaila, Iraq's biggest oil field. The flames are the result of the burning of natural gas that is extracted along with the crude
-- a reminder that Iraq desperately needs foreign help even in capturing and selling the gas instead of burning it off. Rumaila, with an estimated 17.8 billion-barrel reserve, is considered the workhorse of Iraq's oil industry, producing about 1.1 million barrels per day. It was snapped up at the oil auction by British giant BP PLC teaming up with the China National Petroleum Corp. Their consortium plans to drill 56 wells and upgrade equipment to boost output by 10 percent by the end of 2010, Dhia Jaafar, the director-general of the state-run South Oil Co., told The Associated Press. They hope to ramp up ramp up production to 2.85 million barrels per day within seven years. Like other firms, the BP-CNPC consortium offered production targets in exchange for a per barrel fee in a 20-year contract. The work in Basra's four other fields will begin in the next two months, Jaafar said. Casting a shadow over development hopes is the lack of a legal rule book to govern foreign oil investments. The proposed national oil law has been in limbo since 2007 amid bickering between the Baghdad government and the semiautonomous Kurdish government in the oil-rich north. That fight could put these deals in danger of being scrutinized or canceled by the new government. The political rivalries among Shiites in the south also make investors wary. "I think that's why we have not seen a lot of investment before the elections and before the results that will allow the companies to see who has become stronger and who has become weaker," said Ciszuk.
[Associated
Press;
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