2009 Nineveh governorate election
The Nineveh Governorate election of 2009 was held on 31 January 2009 alongside elections for all other governorates outside Iraqi Kurdistan and Kirkuk Governorate.
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All 37 seats for the Nineveh Governorate council | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Turnout | 60% (43%) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Background
Three seats on the council have been reserved for religious minorities: one for Christians, one for Yazidis and one for Shabak.[1]
In May 2008, arrest warrants were issued against a number of KDP council members who were accused of involvement in an assassination ring headed by the deputy leader of the KDP. The ring allegedly assassinated 900 people including a prominent Imam, two former senior officials of the Baath party, doctors and university professors. They were also accused of funnelled money and logistical help to al Qaeda in Iraq, in order to persuade the predominantly Arab residents to turn over security to the Kurdish Peshmerga.[2]
Campaign
The main contest in Ninawa was between the incumbent Kurdish-backed governor and the al-Hadba party, formed by Sunni Arab tribal groups and backed by the Shiite Prime Minister, Nouri al-Maliki.[3] During the campaign the pro-Kurdish governor, Duraid Kashmoula, said he intended to leave Mosul, the city of his birth, after the election and retire to Kurdistan.[4]
Al-Hadba complained of being targeted by Kurdish security forces.[5] They accused the Kurdish parties of fraud in the 2005 election and, together with other non-Kurdish groups asked for federal troops to UN monitors to protect the voting centres.[6] A candidate for the Sunni Arab "Iraq for Us" coalition was killed by a gunman who walked into a cafe and shot him.[5] Just before the election another Sunni Arab candidate, this time from the National Unity List, was killed outside his home in Mosul.[7]
Al-Hadba called for the removal of Kurdish peshmerga forces from Ninawa, saying many of the province's insurgent groups would become law-abiding after that.[8] The Iraqi Islamic Party said the peshmerga should be replaced by the Iraqi Army within six months.[9]
Results
Usama al-Najafi, a member of the Council of Representatives of Iraq and a supporter of the al-Hadba party, claimed that they had won 60% of the vote, with the Kurdish list gaining only 20%.[10]
After the election, reports claimed that Assyrians had been fired from their jobs because they were suspected of not voting for the pro-Kurdish Ishtar Patriotic List, which won the seat reserved for an Assyrian candidate.[11]
Coalition 2005/2009 | Allied national parties | Seats (2005) | Seats (2009) | Change | Votes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
al-Hadba National List | - | - | 19 | 19 | 435,595 | |
Brotherhood Ninevah List | KDP, PUK | 31 | 12 | 19 | 273,458 | |
Iraqi Islamic Party | IIP | 2 | 3 | 1 | 60,191 | |
Ishtar Patriotic List (reserved Assyrian seat) | Chaldean Syriac Assyrian Popular Council | 0 | 1 | 1 | 13,760 | |
Qusay Abbas Mohammed (reserved Shabaki seat) | Independent | 0 | 1 | 1 | 12,949 | |
Yazidi Movement for Reform and Progress (reserved Yezidi seat) | 0 | 1 | 1 | 6,174 | ||
Al Mihrab Martyr List | Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq | 5 | 0 | 5 | 17,915 | |
National Rafidain List | ADM | 1 | 0 | 1 | 6,144 | |
Unified Council of the Tribes of Mosul | 2 | 0 | 2 | |||
Total | 41 | 37 | 4 | 995,169 | ||
Sources: this article - Al Sumaria - New York Times |
References
- Iraqi parliament approves amendment for provincial election law, Xinhua, 2008-11-03
- , Al Akhbar, 2008-10-29, accessed 2009-01-11; English translation here:
- Fractures in Iraq City as Kurds and Baghdad Vie, The New York Times, 2008-10-27
- Iraq governor looks back on troubled tenure, Los Angeles Times, 2009-01-22
- Election friction flares in Iraq's violent north, Reuters, 2009-01-02
- Iraq: political blocs in Mosul demand protection, International Herald Tribune, 2009-01-14
- Poll candidates killed in Iraq, Al Jazeera, 2009-01-30
- Fractures in Iraq City as Kurds and Baghdad Vie, The New York Times, 2008-10-27, accessed 2009-01-05
- Arabs, Kurds take their fight to polls, Los Angeles Times, 2009-01-25
- Sunni nationalist group claims victory in Iraq, Associated Press via Fox News, 2009-02-03
- Assyrians in North Iraq Fired for Not Voting for Pro-Kurdish Slate, Assyrian International News Agency, 2009-02-20