Maysan Governorate

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Maysan Governorate
Arabic: ميسان
Location of Maysan Governorate
Coordinates: 31°54′N 47°2′E / 31.9, 47.033
Country Iraq
Capital Amarah
Population
 - Total 785,068
Main language(s) Arabic

Maysan (Arabic: ميسان) is one of the governorates of Iraq. It is in the east of the country, bordering Iran. Its capital is Al Amarah, which sits on the Euphrates River. The second settlement is Majar Al-Kabir. Before 1976 it was known as Amara Province.

Maysan is a majority Shia Arab province. Its population suffered greatly during the Iran-Iraq War, during which it was a major battlefield, and subsequently post the 1991 Shia Uprising. The governorate is traditionally home to many Marsh Arabs.

In 2003 it came under the control of the UK Armed Forces after the invasion of Iraq, and an elected Provinicial Council had now been formed. Some of this formation process has been described by Rory Stewart The Prince of the Marshes: And Other Occupational Hazards of a Year in Iraq. Majar Al-Kabir was the site of the death of six British Royal Military Policemen in 2003, and Al-Amarah became a well-publicised city in the British press when a rash of street fighting occurred in the summer of 2004.

A proposal to join Maysan with the neighbouring governorates of Basra and Dhi Qar to form a southeastern state in an eventual Iraqi federation is currently in the talking stages.[1]

Since October 2006 the region of farmland and marshes has been a chokepoint for munitions and people entering Iraq from Iran. Political control has been fiercely contested by followers of Abdul Aziz al-Hakim and Muqtada al-Sadr. Mr. Sadr’s allies dominate the 42-member provincial council, and the governor is a former Mahdi Army commander. But the police chief is a former Badr Organization member, and many of his policemen pledge loyalty to that militia.[2] On April 18, 2007, the province became the fourth in Iraq where Iraqi troops have sole responsibility for security.

[edit] Provincial Government

  • Governor: Adil Muhawdar Radi [3]