Iraqi railway history

[Poster advertising the Taurus Express]

The book Middle East Railways by Hugh Hughes mentions that: A very interesting metre-gauge link was established at Maqil in December 1943 ... The line led to exchange sidings at Tanuma on the east bank from where a standard gauge railway was built to the Iraqi border and on to join the Iranian system. This link closed July 1945. The Iranian line (operational from 1943 to 1945) ran to a junction at Hoseyniyeh with the Ahwaz - Khorramshahr line (commssioned in May 1942).

Odds from the Iraq entry in Encyclopædia Britannica:

Railway construction began in Iraq in 1902, part of the Berlin - Baghdad project, seen as a standard gauge through route. After the British invasion of 1914, Basra - Baghdad was built with surplus metre gauge equipment from India, and Iraq has a similar length now of both gauges. 2 529 km, 19 steam locos, 163 Diesels, 4 DMUs, 240 carriages, 3 280 wagons, 1 377 staff.
World Atlas of Railways (OS Nock, 1978)

© Andrew Grantham. Last update 2004-10-19. These pages are mostly compiled from secondary sources, so I can't offer any guarantees about accuracy! Do please let me know if you can add more information.