Partnerships in Iraq
In 1957 King Faisal II suggested to the Iraqi Construction Council that
a teaching hospital should be built in Basrah prior to the establishment
of a new medical college. The Iraqi Construction Council approved the
king's suggestion and issued a statement saying that "a new hospital
will be built in Basrah in the near future". The construction of the
hospital began after nearly two years, in 1959. This delay was due to
the 1958 revolution under the leadership of President Abdul-Karim Kasim.
The location of the hospital was planned to be by the Shatt al-Arab
waterway in the area called Al-Khura (nowadays called al-Barada’iya) in
the southern part of Basrah. Because of the political fluctuations in
Iraq since 1958, the completion of the hospital building was
unfortunately delayed for twenty years. Finally, the hospital building
was completed in 1979 and opened to the public in the same year, one
year before the start of the Iraq - Iran war. During the war the
hospital building suffered severe damage. For that reason, in 1987 the
hospital was moved from the original building on the river bank to
Al-Zubair (20 kilometers away from the centre of Basrah).
At the end of the Iraq - Iran war in 1988, and after superficial maintenance had
been carried out on the hospital building, the hospital was returned to
its original location. A number of maintenance contracts were
performed on the hospital buildings between 1988 and 1999, but none of
these repairs were sufficient to bring the hospital building up to a
satisfactory condition. In 1999 the International Red Cross started a
two year project to repair the hospital buildings, and this work
finally brought the hospital up to a condition that enabled it to serve
its patients properly.
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