Ripe future beckons businessman By Pan Zhongming (China Daily) Updated: 2006-07-27 08:51
After three days of efforts, Liu got a permit to enter the Green Zone and
opened his restaurant with money borrowed from friends.
Soon, business was brisk. He sold a plate of snacks for US$7
and the food was apparently so alluring that it was common to see tanks lined up
outside as the soldiers dined. Civilian foreigners, too, started patronizing his
restaurant and Liu was well on his way to his first fortune.
He did not
stop with food, though he found selling whisky to US soldiers more
profitable. Liu bought the stuff from a market outside the Green Zone and
sold for five times the price and sometimes, US helicopters would land to
pick up the liquor, he said.
"The daily income from selling whisky was
between US$3,000 and US$4,000," Liu said. "But making money was always like
walking a tightrope."
One day, a US official questioned him for selling
liquor to US soldiers who were not allowed to drink on the base but fortunately,
the British official accompanying him helped Liu, claiming it was not against
the rules because the British soldiers were allowed to drink.
The next
year, he took his friend Xiao Shuai a former colleague in the Shenzhen IT
office to expand the business.
In the next two years, the pair
made nearly 4 million yuan (US$500,000). But with things getting worse by the
day, they decided to say goodbye to the country late last year.
Now back
in Shenzhen, Liu has bought two apartments on the city's coast, but is not
content with putting his feet up he has set eyes on an even more distant
land, Cote d'Ivoire, a country plagued by civil war.
"I've heard that one
tomato sells for as high as US$1 there," Liu said. "I want to start a tomato
farm and reap another fortune."
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