Basra Governorate

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Basra Governorate
Location of Basra Governorate
Coordinates: 30°22′N 47°22′E / 30.367, 47.367
Country Iraq
Capital Basra
Area
 - Total 19,070 km² (7,363 sq mi)
Population (2003 [1])
 - Total 1,761,000
Main language(s) Arabic
Basra (Bassorah) Vilayet in 1897
Basra (Bassorah) Vilayet in 1897

Basra province, or Al Basrah province, is a province of Iraq, with an area of 19,070 square kilometers (7,363 sq mi) and an estimated population of about 1,761,000 [2] (2003). Its capital is Basra City, the country's second largest city; other major cities include Corna (Eden), Az Zubayr, Umm Qasr Al Qurna and Abu Al Khaseeb. The province has international borders with Kuwait to the south and Iran to the east.

Contents

[edit] Provincial Government

  • Governor: Muhammad Musbih al-Wa'ili [1]
  • Deputy Governor: Luay al-Battat [2]
  • Provincial Council Chairman (PCC): Muhammad Sa'doun al-Abadi [3]

[edit] History

[edit] After World War I

Historically, under the Ottoman Empire, Basra province included the modern-day state of Kuwait. After defeating the Ottoman Empire in World War I, the United Kingdom combined the old Ottoman provinces (vilayets) of Basra, Baghdad and Mosul to form the state of Iraq, which Britain controlled as a League of Nations mandate. Kuwait had become a separate British protectorate shortly before the outbreak of World War I.

[edit] After the Baath regime

A proposal to join Basra with the neighbouring governorates of Dhi Qar and Maysan to form a southeastern state in an eventual Iraqi federation is currently under discussion. A new law, passed by the Iraqi Parliament in 2006, allows for the merger of two or more provinces as of April 2008.

On the 9th of December 2007, it was announced by British Prime Minister Gordon Brown that control of the Basra Governorate would be handed over from Coalition forces to local Iraqi control.[3] The province was formally transferred a week later, on the 16th of December 2007, making it the 9th such province to be transferred to full Iraqi control.[4]

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.citypopulation.de/Iraq.html
  2. ^ http://www.citypopulation.de/Iraq.html
  3. ^ "Iraq to be given control of Basra". BBC NEWS, December 9, 2007.
  4. ^ "UK troops return Basra to Iraqis". BBC NEWS, December 16, 2007.