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Iraqi parliament elects former environment minister Nizar Amedi as country's new president

By IANS | Updated: April 12, 2026 08:05 IST

Baghdad, April 12 The Iraqi Parliament elected former environment minister Nizar Amedi as the country's new president, following ...

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Baghdad, April 12 The Iraqi Parliament elected former environment minister Nizar Amedi as the country's new president, following a decisive voting session held in the capital Baghdad.

Parliament Speaker Haibet al-Halbousi officially announced Amedi as the winner after he secured 227 votes in the runoff vote. Following the announcement, the president-elect took the constitutional oath, Xinhua news agency reported.

The pivotal session was attended by approximately 250 lawmakers from the 329-seat parliament, exceeding the constitutional quorum of 220 members required for the presidential election.

According to the televised session, Amedi, the candidate of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), led the first round with 208 votes, while his primary competitors, Muthanna Amin from the Kurdistan Islamic Union and current Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein, received 17 and 16 votes respectively.

The election moved to a second round between Amedi and Amin, as no candidate secured a two-thirds majority in the initial ballot.

Amedi, head of the Political Bureau of the PUK in Baghdad, previously held the post of Iraqi environment minister from 2022 to 2024 and has acted as an adviser to former Iraqi presidents.

Under the Iraqi constitution, the newly elected president has 15 days to nominate the leader of the largest parliamentary bloc as the prime minister-designate. The nominee will then have 30 days to form a new cabinet and seek a confidence vote.

Iraq held parliamentary elections in November last year. The vote concludes a long period of political deadlock. The election of the new president had been stalled due to a lack of consensus between the major Kurdish parties and the failure to achieve the required two-thirds parliamentary quorum in previous attempts.

Under Iraq's post-2003 power-sharing system, the presidency is reserved for a Kurd, while the parliamentary speaker is a Sunni, and the prime minister is a Shiite.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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