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The front of the Iraqi Dinar 50-dinar note shows the grain silo at Basrah. Working at full capacity the facility can off-load and process 60,000 tons of grain per hour.
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The back of the Iraqi Dinar 50-dinar note shows date ...
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The front of the Iraqi Dinar 250-dinar note shows the astrolabe. One of the earliest scientific instruments - able to measure the time of day or night and altitude and latitude - conceived by the Greeks it was further developed ...
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The front of the Iraqi Dinar 500-dinar note shows the Ducan Dam. The dam is located by Al Zab dowside river within Sulaimania governorate , it is 70 KM far to the north west of Sulaimania city. Some facts ...
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The front of the Iraqi Dinar 1,000-dinar note shows a gold dinar coin, used in this region until superseded by more modern coins and notes.
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The back of the Iraqi Dinar 1,000-dinar note shows Al-Mustansirya University, Baghdad. Built in the mid-thirteenth ...
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The front of the Iraqi Dinar 25,000-dinar note shows a Kurdish farmer holding sheaf of wheat. Tractor in background.
The back of the Iraqi Dinar 25,000-dinar note shows King Hammurabi. Credited with writing the first code of law in human history ...
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The front of the Iraqi Dinar 5,000-dinar note shows Gully Ali Beg and its 800m waterfall. The 10km gully passes between Mount Kork and Mount Nwathnin, some 60km away from Shaqlawa.
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The back of the Iraqi Dinar 5,000-dinar note shows the ...
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The front of the Iraqi Dinar 10,000-dinar note shows Abu Ali Hasan Ibn al-Haitham (known as Alhazen to medieval scholars in the West), born Basrah in 965 A.D. His most important work - although he wrote some 200 books - ...
Iraq takes another step toward conquering debt USA Today - Jan 19, 2006 ... US officials also are cheered by the stability of the Iraqidinar and the IMF's forecast that the economy will expand 10.4% this year after a modest 2.6 ...
Iraq, with the third largest oil reserve in the world, has benefited from the recent rise in oil prices and generated billions of dollars in revenues. In 2008, Iraq will likely earn between $67 billion and $79 billion in oil sales—at least twice the average annual amount Iraq generated from 2005 through 2007. This substantial increase in revenues offers the Iraqi government the potential to better finance its own security and economic needs. (Source: US GAO, Stabilizing and Rebuilding Iraq, September 2008)