DEM2717 south of Baghdad

Chris Curtis served in Iraq with the US infantry, and has sent me this photo of a short IRR train hauled by loco DEM2717 which he took “just south of Baghdad” in 2005.

DEM 2717 south of Baghdad© Chris Curtis

The 50 locos in the DEM2700 class were built by Dalian Loco in China, and delivered to Iraqi Republic Railways from 2002.

More pics

The UK’s Defence Image database has a few pictures of railways in Iraq dated 26/11/03, which can be found if you search for railway. I can’t figure out if the copyright rules let me put them here or not, but try these links

  • http://tinyurl.com/2ctvay Members of A Company, 1st Battalion The Royal Scots. On foot patrol in Az-Zubayr south of Basra.
  • http://tinyurl.com/2c824p A member of A Company, 1st Battalion The Royal Scots with Iraqi children, on foot patrol in Az-Zubayr south of Basra crosses rail tracks.
  • http://tinyurl.com/2efxbb A child sits on a rusting railway carriage [actually a freight wagon] as he watches members of A Company, 1st Battalion The Royal Scots on foot patrol Az-Zubayr south of Basra.

Mesopotamian railways in 1928

Rainer Fuchs’s Iraq railway stamps website has a PDF copy of a wonderful article published by The Railway Magazine in April 1928, entitled The Railways of Mesopotatmia by Richard Coke.

There is also a copy of Rainer’s own article “Iraq Railway Post 1928 – c.1942”, published in the October 2007 issue of The American Philatelist, the monthly publication of the American Philatelic Society.

Basrah Railroad Station Turned Over to the Iraqi Ministry of Transportation

A press release from 23 September 2007

For Immediate Release
Release No. 070923-1
September 23, 2007
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

Basrah Railroad Station Turned Over to the Iraqi Ministry of Transportation
Gulf Region South district

Basrah, Iraq — The rehabilitation of the Basrah railroad station, one of the main transportation projects of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in the south of Iraq, marks an important achievement in developing the basic transportation services and strategic infrastructure for the Iraqi people.

“The Basrah Railroad station was recently completed and turned over to the Iraqi Ministry of Transportation,” said Rebecca Wingfield, GRS project engineer with Adder Area Office. “This $480,000 project does not only help to develop the basic services and the strategic infrastructure, but it provides a critical link for the country of Iraq. It ties the southern portion of the country with the northern portion.”

Wingfield said the Basrah railroad station was unusable without renovation, noting that the structure of the building was damaged and unsafe and that the platforms and the walkways were torn up or removed.

An Iraqi engineer said work on this facility included the construction of many outer buildings as well as rehabilitation to the existing structures. In addition, he said, the platforms and sidewalks were replaced so people could get on and off the trains.

“Transporting goods and services is extremely important for any growing region and economy,” Wingfield said. “The railroad system will continue to grow in serving the Iraqi people while [they are] rebuilding their country.”

She said the mission of the Gulf Region South district throughout Basrah Province includes performing site evaluations and rehabilitation work on seven railway stations, many of which were looted and damaged after the fall of Saddam Hussein. She said the goal is to repair the stations and make them safe and efficient once again.

“The railroad [is a] main source of transportation and the major transporter of goods, materials and people throughout the country of Iraq,” Wingfield said. “This project was to install all new platforms and walkways as well as renovating portions of the interior of the station and exterior façade.

“These improvements will greatly facilitate enhanced operations at this site,” she added. “We applaud the Iraqi team with whom we have closely worked in making this challenge become a reality.”

The Iraqi engineer said rebuilding the rail industry in Basrah is very important to Iraq’s economy. Basrah, one of the oldest cities in Iraq, has a great impact on the country’s economy.

“The Iraq railroad system provides efficient, reliable transportation,” the engineer said. “It is also essential for trade and commerce from the port and business centers in Southern Iraq to the population centers in Northern Iraq.

“Iraq has a network of 2,603 kilometers and the main railway routes are Baghdad –Husaiba and Umm Qasr/Basrah – Baghdad” he said, pointing out that there are also branches to Kirkuk and Akashat.

Baghdad terminus

An e-mail from Lawrence Naylor which I’d forgotten to upload tells us: I worked at the Ibn al Bitar hospital in Baghdad from 1985 to 1989. I talked with the locals on a friendly basis and they told me that a longtime unused run-down building 100 yards opposite the hospital entrance was the original last stop of the Baghdad railway. The tracks had long been removed and partially tarmaced.

Defending the railroads

The Daily Telegraph of October 12 2007 has an article by Damien McElroy entitled “Iraq insurgency: Defending the railroads”.

McElroy reports from al-Qaim,saying

The unending suspension of Iraq’s national railway stands as a stark symbol of the failure to rebuild the nation.

Getting the network operating is not one of Washington’s 18 benchmarks for progress in Iraq but the resumption of scheduled services along thousands of miles of track would mark a momentous breakthrough four years after the war to depose Saddam Hussein.

Two Iraq Republic Railway inspectors at the remote desert railhead in al-Qaim have defied terrorist threats and criminal gangs to loyally keep the railway open on limited local runs.

Freight trains carrying supplies for a phosphorous plant are the only service offered at al-Qaim, which is also the main American base.

There are also some good photos.

Steam loco at the bottom of the sea

The September 2007 issue of Railway Magazine has an article entitled “Locos Lost At Sea” by Mike Hudson and Philip Atkins, which attempts to list all the locomotives which have been lost beneath the waves through ship wrecks and the like.

It mentions in passing “an Iraqi streamlined Pacific”, and a table of sunken locos lists it as lost “1940(?)”.

This is the Robert Stephenson & Hawthorns loco which was to have been Iraqi railways PC class number 504 Kirkuk.

Renovated Iraqi Railway Station Provides Critical Link

A press release (PDF) (here’s a HTML version) by A Al Bahrani, public affairs specialist with Gulf Region South District, Gulf Region Division, US Army Corps of Engineers, with some photos of station repair works at Basrah.

Basrah station The $480,000 Basrah Railroad Station project by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Gulf Region South provided for several areas to be renovated, including the new main entrance to the station. Photo by A. Al Bahrani

BASRAH, Iraq, June 27, 2007 – The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Gulf Region South District’s rehabilitation of the railway station here is part of the effort to build and develop Iraq’s basic services and strategic infrastructure.

“The $480,000 project provides a critical link for the country of Iraq and it ties the southern portion of the country with the northern portion,” said Thomas Edison, chief of engineering and construction for Gulf Region South.

“The Iraq railroad system provides efficient, reliable transportation, and many people rely on the railroad for traveling. It is also critical for trade and commerce from the deep-water marine port and business centers in southern Iraq to the population centers in northern Iraq,” Edison said.

Stanley Dowdy, Basrah Area Office resident engineer, said the railroad station was unusable without renovation. “The platforms for getting on and off the trains and the walkways were all torn up or removed, and the building structure itself was damaged and unsafe,” he said. “This project installed all new platforms and walkways, as well as renovating portions of the interior and the exterior façade.

“These improvements will greatly facilitate enhanced operations at this site,” he added. “We applaud the Iraqi team with whom we have closely worked in making this challenge become a reality.”

The Corps’ mission for this project consists of performing onsite evaluations and rehabilitation work of seven railway stations throughout the Basrah province. “The goal of the project is to repair the stations and make them safe and efficient once again,” Dowdy said.

“Now, as reconstruction is gaining momentum, the need for a transportation network to provide for efficient movement of essential products such as construction materials, equipment, merchandise, fuel and other supplies is essential for Iraq,” said Hadi Mashkor, the directorate general for Basrah Railroad Station.

Mashkor said rebuilding the rail industry in Basrah is very important to Iraq’s economy. Basrah is one of the oldest cities in Iraq and it is in the heart of the petroleum industry. It directly affects the Iraqi economy.

“Being able to transport goods and services is vital to a growing region and economy. The railroad system will continue to grow in serving the Iraqi people,” Edison said.

Streamlined steam loco

Streamlined steam loco

A postcard found by Rainer Fuchs which shows one of the streamlined pacific steam locomotives built for Iraq by Robert Stephenson & Hawthorns in 1940. Locos 501 Baghdad, 502 El Mosul and 503 El Basrah entered service in 1941, but 504 Kirkuk didn’t make it and is now on the seabed somewhere…

There is a high-resolution works photo of one of the 4-6-2 locos on this Vulcan Foundary website. Comparing the shapes of the letters on the nameplate with written versions of the four possible names, and the photo in Hugh Hughes’s book Middle East Railways, I think both photos show No.502 El Mosul, but I’ll defer to any Arabic speakers on the matter!

The Vulcan Foundary website has scans of a magazine article describing 10 oil-fired metre-gauge 2-8-2 locos built for Iraq. Plus a photo.

Track machines delivered to IRR

Finnish firm Desec has supplied two TL70 track machines to Iraq.

Desec TL 70 track machine arrives in Iraq

Iraqi Republic Railways Company received two Switch Laying Machines type DESEC TRACKLAYER TL 70 from Desec Ltd, Finland in March 2007. The contract includes also spare parts and large training package in Finland.

The Contract was awarded to Desec after international tender and hard competition. The contract further strengthens Desec Ltd’s position as leader manufacturer of switch laying machine in the world and in Middle-East.

The Desec Tracklayer (TL) is a multi-purpose machine for track renewal. TL’s speciality is turnout (switch) replacement. It is a unique machine since it can independently pick up track- and turnout panels from any place where they are laid or from a wagon, move them to the working site and install them to the track with great speed and accuracy. The machine grips the load being carried against the bottom of the Tracklayer’s body, so that no sag or distortion of the load occurs. In five minutes the machine can load and unload itself off and onto the flat wagon or trailer for transportation from site to site within loading gauge as an ordinary freight transport on rails.

Due to increasing requirements for fastness, cost-efficiency and quality in turnout replacement the DESEC Turnout Laying -system has increasingly replaced the conventional systems in turnout assembly and replacing.

So far 29 Desec Tracklayers have been sold to 15 countries worldwide.

Iraqi railroad is back on track

Detroit News dated 14 June carries a report from Eric English/Associated Press

After years of running railroads in Michigan, Richard Van Buskirk Jr. decided to take his expertise to Iraq and help with a dangerous mission.

The 58-year-old East Tawas executive and Vietnam veteran spent the past year working as a consultant for the U.S. Department of State, helping Iraqis rebuild their national railway system.

“Their railroad had been severely damaged when the country was taken over by coalition forces,” said Van Buskirk, who returned home in April. “We’re helping them glue back together the things we destroyed.”


It was 12 months he’ll never forget.

“I’ll be honest with you, it was a great adventure,” he said.

Van Buskirk said he applied for the job in 2006 when he saw an Internet advertisement for a position as a railroad adviser in Iraq.

“It sounded incredibly challenging, and it’s about doing the right thing,” he said.

“They need our help over there and they need people with experience.”

While overseas, Van Buskirk said he was able to reopen 720 miles of rail lines to allow train shipments to resume.


Van Buskirk said Iraq is rich in natural resources, and its railroad is modern and well built.

More at the Detroit News website