Iraq Prime Minister Orders Crackdown on Trademark Violations 

A woman walks by an unlicensed Starbucks cafe in Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2022. (AP)
A woman walks by an unlicensed Starbucks cafe in Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2022. (AP)
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Iraq Prime Minister Orders Crackdown on Trademark Violations 

A woman walks by an unlicensed Starbucks cafe in Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2022. (AP)
A woman walks by an unlicensed Starbucks cafe in Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2022. (AP)

Iraq’s prime minister has ordered a crackdown on local businesses operating under the names of international brands without legal permission, his office said Wednesday. 

The move by the premier, Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, comes after The Associated Press reported last week that Iraq has become a major center of trademark violations and piracy. 

In one prominent example, a chain of fake Starbucks has been operating under the international coffee company’s logo in Baghdad, the Iraqi capital. Starbucks filed a lawsuit in an attempt to shut down the trademark violation, but the case was halted after the owner allegedly threatened lawyers hired by the coffee house. 

Amin Makhsusi, the owner of the fake branches, had admitted to the AP that he operated the stores without a license from Starbucks but denied making threats. He said he had first tried to obtain a license legally, but after being turned down, decided to open the store anyway. 

The statement from al-Sudani's office said that trademark infringements are “a violation of the law, and a crime that harms the business environment and foreign investments” as well as harming "Iraq’s reputation and its ability to attract major companies and institutions with internationally registered brands and trademarks.” 

It said that Iraqi authorities had taken “legal measures” against a number of businesses found to be operating under fake trademarks, but did not specify which ones. 

Asked whether the government had ordered the “Starbucks” stores to be shut down, Yahia Rasool, a spokesperson for al-Sudani, declined to comment beyond the statement issued by his office. 

At one of the unauthorized “Starbucks” branches in Baghdad, the signs bearing the logo had been removed from the storefront by Wednesday and the main entrance was shuttered by a roll-down metal cover. However, another door remained open and the shop was still doing business inside, serving coffee in Starbucks-brand paper cups. 

Makhsusi told the AP that the stores had taken down the “Starbucks” signs and logos under orders from security officials, but that they were still selling the stock of Starbucks coffee and cups, bought retail, which they had to “get rid of.” 

The chain will change its name, he said, to be able to operate legally. 

However, the issue of counterfeiting and piracy in Iraq goes beyond coffee. 

The broadcaster beIN has sent cease-and-desist letters to Earthlink, Iraq’s largest internet service provider, alleging that a free streaming service offered to its subscribers is composed almost entirely of pirated content. 

And at least two US pharmaceutical companies have approached the US Chamber of Commerce with complaints that their trademark was being used to sell counterfeit life-saving medication by Iraqi companies. 



Euro Zone Growth Slows on Surging Energy Costs

 Industrial facilities and infrastructure at the Hoechst Industrial Park, near Frankfurt, Germany, 07 April 2026. (EPA)
Industrial facilities and infrastructure at the Hoechst Industrial Park, near Frankfurt, Germany, 07 April 2026. (EPA)
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Euro Zone Growth Slows on Surging Energy Costs

 Industrial facilities and infrastructure at the Hoechst Industrial Park, near Frankfurt, Germany, 07 April 2026. (EPA)
Industrial facilities and infrastructure at the Hoechst Industrial Park, near Frankfurt, Germany, 07 April 2026. (EPA)

The euro zone's private sector expansion weakened sharply in March as the Middle East war drove up energy costs and disrupted supply chains, with overall demand - a key gauge for economic health - falling for the first time in ‌eight months, a survey showed on Tuesday.

The S&P Global euro zone Composite Purchasing Managers' Index fell to 50.7 in March from 51.9 in February, but was slightly higher than a preliminary estimate of 50.5. PMI readings above 50.0 indicate growth in activity, according to Reuters.

“March's PMI indicates that the euro zone economy has already been hit hard by the war ⁠in the Middle East,” said Chris Williamson, chief business economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

New business declined in March after improving steadily since July, dragged down by weaker demand for services. Overall export orders also fell again, with international services demand recording its steepest drop in six months.

The encouraging signs of growth seen earlier in the year have been eradicated thanks to surging energy prices, choked supply chains, financial market volatility and a renewed downturn in demand, Williamson added.

Services activity barely rose, with the business activity index sliding to 50.2 from ‌51.9 ⁠in February - its weakest reading in 10 months.

Manufacturing output growth remained solid.

Spain led the growth among the major economies, while France and Italy contracted. Germany's expansion slowed to its weakest pace so far this year.

Employment declined while business confidence dropped, raising concerns about future hiring and investment.

Input cost inflation ⁠surged to its highest in slightly more than three years, with manufacturing seeing a record one-month jump. Firms raised prices charged to customers at the fastest pace since February 2024, though the increase was ⁠more modest than the spike in their own costs.

Headline inflation in the bloc jumped above the European Central Bank’s 2% target last month, hitting 2.5% from 1.9% as soaring oil and ⁠gas prices intensified the dilemma between safeguarding growth and curbing inflation.

The survey's signal for first-quarter gross domestic product growth was 0.2%, with a risk of contraction this quarter unless the Middle East conflict is resolved swiftly.

German service sector growth slows

Meanwhile, business activity growth in Germany's service sector abruptly lost momentum in March as demand weakened amid fallout from the war in the Middle East, the survey also ‌showed on Tuesday.

PMI for Germany fell to 50.9 in March from 53.5 in February, marking its lowest reading since September and slightly below a preliminary reading of 51.2.

Phil Smith, economics associate director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, cited higher prices at the petrol pumps and heightened uncertainty as leading to the slowdown.

Despite the sharply rising costs, however, service providers have not been able to pass on greater price increases to customers due to the weaker demand environment, he added.

“Inflows of new business have fallen for the ‌first ⁠time since last September in a clear sign of the Middle East war's immediate impact on demand, whilst a notable drop in business expectations underlines how higher energy prices, supply chain disruption and generally ⁠elevated levels of uncertainty are set to stifle growth in the year ahead,” said Smith.

Business expectations dropped to a three-month low in March, ⁠to 53.4, and slipped below the long-run average of 56.7.

The final S&P Global composite PMI, which includes manufacturing and services, ⁠ticked down to 51.9 in March from 53.2 the previous month, a three-month low driven entirely by the downturn in the service sector.

France's services sector contracts

Also, France's services sector contracted further in March as client spending weakened due to the war in the Middle East and caution among ‌businesses in the run-up to last month's local elections, a business survey showed on Tuesday.

S&P Global said the final services PMI for March fell to 48.8 points from 49.6 points in February, marking ⁠a slight improvement from the flash March services figure of 48.3 points.

The final March composite PMI - which includes both the services and manufacturing sectors - also came in at 48.8, down from 49.9 in February. S&P Global said this marked the ‌quickest ⁠drop in private sector business activity since October.

S&P Global added that the US-Israeli war on Iran was impacting French businesses both in terms of inflation and customers postponing ⁠orders or delaying investments.

“Much uncertainty lies ahead, a condition which French businesses have become rather accustomed to in recent years ⁠given the domestic political environment. Uncertainty is bad for growth, and the inflation impulse stemming from the ⁠war raises the risk of stagflation in France,” said Joe Hayes, principal economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.


China’s Xi Urges Demand‑Driven Growth in Services Sector

People visit a shopping center in Beijing on April 7, 2026. (AFP)
People visit a shopping center in Beijing on April 7, 2026. (AFP)
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China’s Xi Urges Demand‑Driven Growth in Services Sector

People visit a shopping center in Beijing on April 7, 2026. (AFP)
People visit a shopping center in Beijing on April 7, 2026. (AFP)

China's President Xi Jinping has called for a demand-driven approach coupled with reform and technological empowerment to develop the service sector, the official Xinhua news agency reported on Wednesday.

China will expand and upgrade the services sector, cultivate more "China service" brands and push production-oriented services toward specialization and higher positions in the value chain, Xinhua quoted Xi as saying in a directive to ‌a two-day national ‌service industry conference in Beijing ‌that ⁠began on Tuesday.

China will “emphasize ⁠demand-driven development, push forward reform breakthroughs, harness science and technology to drive growth, and expand openness and cooperation,” Xi said.

China should expand the supply of upgraded services and improve its consumption structure in line with demographic shifts to ⁠meet increasingly diverse consumer demand, Premier ‌Li Qiang said at ‌the meeting, according to Xinhua.

He added that China ‌should accelerate the growth of technology services ‌by moving R&D and design toward greater specialization and higher value-added segments.

Beijing has been signaling a policy shift to focus on services this year as it ‌tries to redirect some stimulus from sometimes-wasteful investments on transport, housing and industrial ⁠infrastructure ⁠to potentially more productive areas.

Soft consumer demand has hobbled the economy and Beijing's measures so far haven't turned it around. Per-capita services consumption was 46.1% in 2025, well below the 70% in the US.

China's new five-year plan pledged to "significantly" raise the share of household consumption in the economy over the next five years from around 40% at present, though it stopped short of setting a specific target.


Saudi Fund Injects $1.7 Bn to Boost Food Security

The fund financed agricultural projects worth 7.1 million dollars to support afforestation and expand vegetation cover. SPA
The fund financed agricultural projects worth 7.1 million dollars to support afforestation and expand vegetation cover. SPA
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Saudi Fund Injects $1.7 Bn to Boost Food Security

The fund financed agricultural projects worth 7.1 million dollars to support afforestation and expand vegetation cover. SPA
The fund financed agricultural projects worth 7.1 million dollars to support afforestation and expand vegetation cover. SPA

Saudi Arabia’s Agricultural Development Fund is stepping up efforts to bolster food security and sustain the Kingdom’s agricultural sector, raising self-sufficiency and strengthening strategic reserves.

The push is part of a broader strategy balancing support for domestic production and supply chains with external programs to import targeted products and invest in cross-border agriculture.

Habib Al-Shammari, the fund’s official spokesman, told Asharq Al-Awsat the approach aligns with the national agriculture and food security strategies. He said the fund continues to promote modern technologies in agricultural projects to preserve natural resources and boost productivity.

In 2024, the fund disbursed more than 1.2 billion riyals (about 300 million dollars) for projects that used modern technologies. These helped save nearly 4 million cubic meters of water and cut energy consumption by about 330,000 megawatt hours, Al-Shammari said.

He added that such technologies also reduce greenhouse gas emissions by improving efficiency, in line with the Saudi Green Initiative. The fund financed agricultural projects worth 26.6 million riyals (7.1 million dollars) to support afforestation and expand vegetation cover.

Al-Shammari said the fund has also backed biodiversity protection by financing programs supporting beekeeping and honey production, developing rose cultivation and rain-fed crops, and extending loans totaling more than 12 million riyals to central nurseries.

Loan approvals reached about 6.47 billion riyals (1.72 billion dollars) by the end of 2025, he said. The fund also signed a memorandum of understanding last year with the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) in Rome to support sustainable rural agricultural development and exchange expertise.

Al-Shammari said such agreements strengthen the agricultural sector, pointing to deals with local entities, including Jazan City for Primary and Downstream Industries, to enhance integration into food-sector investment opportunities and maximize the impact of the fund’s programs for investors and farmers.

The fund also signed an agreement with the National Center for Palms and Dates to support the sustainability of the sector and related industries, financing operating costs for date purchases and offering tailored financing solutions.

Another agreement with the Imam Abdulaziz bin Mohammed Royal Reserve Development Authority focuses on vegetation development, ecosystem sustainability, and support for local communities within the reserve.

To strengthen the livestock sector, the fund signed a deal with Al-Raie National Livestock Company to finance a sheep farming project in Hail valued at 1.106 billion riyals (295 million dollars), with a total investment cost of 2 billion riyals (533 million dollars). It also signed an agreement with the Center for Support and Liquidation (Infath) to regulate the sale of seized real estate and share expertise.