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Iraq resumes North Refinery in Baiji closed for a years

Iraq on Friday resumed its North Refinery in Baiji that was shut for a years throughout the violence and mayhem that followed the U.S.led invasion in 2003 which made it almost difficult to run among the country's most vital energy complexes.

The fall of Saddam Hussein was implied to bring stability and success to significant OPEC oil manufacturer Iraq after years of financial mismanagement and military misadventures brought the nation to its knees.

Rather Iraqis struggled with an insurgency, a sectarian civil war and then the arrival of Al Qaeda and later on Islamic state which eliminated tens of countless individuals.

The Baiji refinery complex was a high profile victim of the turmoil, a focal point for combating in between security forces and militants for months on end.

Al Qaeda had adequate control over the Baiji area that it was able to daunt refinery workers and hijack its refined products. It sold the items to neighbouring nations and used the earnings to finance its insurgency.

The refinery was shut in 2014 when Islamic State fighters seized it after taking over one 3rd of the country's. territory. Islamic State took oil and petroleum items from. areas it managed in an effort to develop a self-sufficient. Islamic empire.

It has a refining capacity of 150,000 barrels each day (bpd). after reopening, which would bring the total capability of the. Baiji refining complex to 290,000 bpd.

Iraq intends to reach self-sufficiency in oil derivatives by. mid-next year, Mohammed Shia al-Sudani said in the resuming. ceremony.

(source: Reuters)