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sambob

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  1. Thank you, K98. I'm loving what I'm hearing... He said al-Shara told the "newspaper rectitude electronic": "there will be a quick steps direction proper to approve oil and gas law during this parliamentary session, which buried for political reasons and stressed that he should not be deported to the next session he enjoys Ba fake great after the Constitution to regulate relations between foreign-invested enterprises and the government. " Here's to hoping that their version of "quick" actually means they will get this done now and doesn't match their meaning of "soon".
  2. I agree. And I think the longer they delay, the higher the chances that the dinar will see a significant value change...imo.
  3. Thanks, Yota. I like the sounds of this... "there is serious intention, and discourage high to approve oil and gas law and vote on it during the remainder of the legislative term of the House of Representatives, "
  4. Wow, they have come a long way. Thanks for the post.
  5. Not sure what you mean, Rocky. The dinar exchange rate is set (manipulated) by the CBI and does not float up and down. At least...not yet.
  6. Speculator2, thanks for the post. Now let's just hope we can actually get our money out when the time comes. Last time I checked Warka's interest rates were 4% for USD and 7% for IQD accounts. How right you are, jcfrag about the Willy Wonka river boat ride. I couldn't agree more!
  7. Thanks for the suggestions. Good to know the dealers will buy back from those that need the cash.
  8. Yes, I am aware of what they will pay. Perhaps there is someone out there that prefers to buy from someone other than a dealer and at a lower cost than what they are selling for.
  9. I am looking to sell 5 million uncirculated dinar with original paperwork (purchased years ago from SafeDinar and DinarTrade). The current price to buy from these sites is between $970-$994 per million. I am asking $950 per million.
  10. Great questions, Tony. 15+ million for just 10 machines...seems like they should do more than count but then I'm not a currency guru. Let's get this thing done! Sambob
  11. Thank you for your effort but unfortunately as mentioned above this is old news...here is the article: 15 December 2010 Last updated at 14:30 ET UN lifts sanctions against Iraq The UN Security Council has voted to lift most international sanctions imposed on Iraq during the Saddam Hussein era. The vote is intended as a recognition of the political progress made in Iraq. One resolution ends sanctions that were imposed to stop Iraq building nuclear, chemical or biological weapons. The fear that Saddam Hussein was developing weapons of mass destruction was the main reason cited for the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Sanctions were first imposed on Baghdad in 1991 after Iraq invaded Kuwait, though some relating to trade, investment and conventional weapons have been lifted since 2003. Different situationIn a statement, the Security Council said it "recognises that the situation now existing in Iraq is significantly different from that which existed at the time of the adoption of resolution 661" in 1990. The council also voted to return control of Iraq's oil and natural gas revenue to the government on 30 June and to end all remaining activities of the oil-for-food programme, which helped ordinary Iraqis cope with sanctions. US Vice President Joe Biden, chairing the high-level meeting, noted that the number of violent attacks in Iraq had fallen and he said the people there had "flatly rejected the grim future offered by extremists". "Iraq is on the cusp of something remarkable - a stable, self-reliant nation," he said. But UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon said Iraq must make efforts to agree a border with Kuwait and to agree on a dispute over war reparations if all sanctions were to be ended. Baghdad still pays 5% of revenues from its oil sales into a fund which pays reparations to Kuwait. Iraq's Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said normalisation of relations with Kuwait would be a priority for the new Iraqi government. "I can say that the session today is the beginning of the end," Mr Zebari told Associated Press before the meeting. "Today Iraq will be liberated from all sanctions caused by wars and misdeeds of the former regime," he said.
  12. Thanks! Looking forward to hearing what happened.
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