Jump to content

Governorates of Iraq

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2607:fea8:419f:ef9d:7982:e49:524a:618f (talk) at 09:42, 2 May 2020 (Governorates). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Iraqi Governorates
المحافظات العراقية (Arabic)
پارێزگاکانی ئێراق (Kurdish)
  • Also known as:
  • Muḥāfażah
    محافظة (Arabic)
    پارێزگا Parêzga
The original 18 governorates
CategoryFederated state
LocationRepublic of Iraq
Number19 governorates
Populations220,000 (Helebce) – 7,055,200 (Baghdad)
Areas529 km2 (204.2 sq mi) (Baghdad) – 138,500 km2 (53,476 sq mi) (Al Anbar)
Government
Subdivisions

Iraq presently consists of 19 governorates (محافظة muḥāfażah in Arabic, parêzga in Kurdish), also known as "provinces". As per the Iraqi constitution, three or more governorates can join to form an autonomous region.[citation needed] Baghdad and Basra are the oldest standing administrative regions of Iraq while In 2014 the decision was made to create the Helebce Governorate out of the Helebce District of Slêmanî Governorate.[1][2]

On 21 January 2014, the Council of Ministers of the Government of Iraq approved in principle proposals to create more governorates.[3] The Council announced that two new governorates Tal Afar and Tuz Xurmatu would be formed from the current Nineveh Governorate and Saladin Governorate, respectively.[4] It was also announced that the city of Fallujah of the Al Anbar Governorate would become a separate governorate,[3] which was announced in response to a Sunni Islamist uprising in the city.

Governorates

The governorates
Governorate Postal code ISO code Total area
in miles2
Total area
in km2
Population
7 January 2011
Capital
Al Anbar 31 AN 53,476 138,501 1,561,400 Ramadi
Babil 51 BB 1,976 5,603 1,820,700 Hillah
Baghdad 10 BG 78.84 4,555 7,055,200 Baghdad
Basra 61 BA 7,360 19,070 2,532,000 Basra
Dhi Qar 64 DQ 5,000 12,900 1,836,200 Nasiriyah
Al-Qādisiyyah 58 QA 3,148 8,153 1,134,300 Al Diwaniyah
Diyala 32 DI 6,828 17,685 1,443,200 Baqubah
Duhok 42 DA 2,530 6,553 1,128,700 Duhok
Erbil (Erbîl) 44 AR 5,820 15,074 1,612,700 Erbîl
Halabja (Helebce) 46 1,180 3,060 337,000 Helebce
Karbala 56 KA 1,944 5,034 1,066,600 Karbala
Kirkuk 36 KI 3,737 9,679 1,395,600 Kirkuk
Maysan 62 MA 6,205 16,072 971,400 Amarah
Muthanna 66 MU 19,980 51,740 719,100 Samawah
Najaf 54 NA 11,129 28,824 1,285,500 Najaf
Nineveh 41 NI 14,410 37,323 3,270,400 Mosul
Saladin 34 SD 9,556 24,751 1,408,200 Tikrit
Sulaymaniyah (Slêmanî) 46 SU 6,573 17,023 1,878,800 Slêmanî
Wasit 52 WA 6,623 17,153 1,210,600 Kut

Previous governorates

Borders of the Iraqi governorates, 1980–2003. Kuwait was annexed as 19th governorate, 1990–1991.
Governorate Now part of
Mosul Nineveh Governorate
Duhok Governorate
Diwaniya Al-Qādisiyyah Governorate
Muthanna Governorate
Najaf Governorate
Dulaim (–1962)
Ramadi (1962–1976)
Al Anbar Governorate
Muntafiq (–1976) Dhi Qar Governorate
Amara (–1976) Maysan Governorate
Kut (–1976) Wasit Governorate
Baghdad Baghdad Governorate
Saladin Governorate
Kerkuk (–1976)
At-Ta'mim (1976–2006)
Kerkuk Governorate

Formerly claimed governorates

See also

References

  1. ^ "KRG order turning Halabja into province sets off street celebrations". Rudaw. 14 March 2014. Retrieved 13 August 2016.
  2. ^ "Kurdistan Region President signs Halabja province directive". Kurdistan Region Presidency. 16 March 2014. Retrieved 13 August 2016.
  3. ^ a b "Resolutions of Council of Ministers For Session No. 3 on 21/1/2014". 21 January 2014. Retrieved 13 August 2016.
  4. ^ "Iraqi Council of Ministers approved new provinces of Tuz Xurmatu and Tal Afar". Kurd Net. 21 January 2014. Retrieved 23 August 2014.