New Governor Elected for Iraq's Nineveh
BAGHDAD (Dispatches) – The Provincial Council of Nineveh on Monday elected Mansour al-Mareed as the new governor of the province, after the former head was sacked over the deadly ferry sinking in the provincial capital Mosul, the official television reported.
Up to 28 out of the 39 members of the provincial council voted in favor of al-Mareed, while the rest 11 walked out of the session, the state-run Iraqiya channel said.
The voting for new provincial governor came after the Iraqi parliament unanimously voted to sack the former governor Nawfal al-Akoub and his two deputies on March 24.
On March 21, a ferry boat carrying dozens of people capsized when crossing from the bank of the river to a small tourist island called Um al Rabeein in northern Mosul, some 400 km north of the capital Baghdad.
The accident, which killed some 100 people, was the gravest accident in Mosul since the city was liberated from Daesh terrorists in late 2017.
Angry residents of Mosul blamed the negligence of the local government for the incident, accusing the government of corruption and mismanagement.
Up to 28 out of the 39 members of the provincial council voted in favor of al-Mareed, while the rest 11 walked out of the session, the state-run Iraqiya channel said.
The voting for new provincial governor came after the Iraqi parliament unanimously voted to sack the former governor Nawfal al-Akoub and his two deputies on March 24.
On March 21, a ferry boat carrying dozens of people capsized when crossing from the bank of the river to a small tourist island called Um al Rabeein in northern Mosul, some 400 km north of the capital Baghdad.
The accident, which killed some 100 people, was the gravest accident in Mosul since the city was liberated from Daesh terrorists in late 2017.
Angry residents of Mosul blamed the negligence of the local government for the incident, accusing the government of corruption and mismanagement.