When the guardian is corrupt, a meeting of Kirkuk provincial council cost Iraqi government 3 billion IQD

Kirkuk- A meeting of the Kirkuk provincial council, April 25, 2017 Photo: KirkukNow

A meeting of the Kirkuk provincial council  cost the Iraqi government two billion and 451 million Iraqi dinars, in addition three million dinars for mobile recharge cards and another 590 million dinars in fuel expenses for the members of the provincial council. Nevertheless almost one third of the council members did not show up for more than two years.

This extravagance which went unpunished took place at a time councilors had been tasked to resolve four fateful issues, yet none of these issues were dealt with.

The Kirkuk provincial council sessions were stalled following the October 16, 2017 events due to political and military disputes between Baghdad and Erbil as well as long-standing disputes between the different components of the province. Consequently, from October 2017 to November 2019, the quorum required for a regular session was not completed except for a single time which also did not come up with important decisions. Eventually, the Iraqi provincial councils were dissolved by the Iraqi Parliament in late November 2019.

On April 9th, 2019, the Kirkuk provincial council convened for the first time since the October 16, 2017 events. The meeting was devoted to discuss a range of issues, including the budget allocated for the province.

21 out of the total of 41 council members attended the meeting which was chaired by the interim head of the council.

The meeting decided to reactivate the council's committees and replaced the head of the council’s financial committee, according to councilor Ahmed al-Askari.

Also discussed was the province's share of the petrodollar budget and the mechanism that should be adopted to spend the budget on service projects. A voting on the bill was delayed until next week’s meeting.

However, the planned meeting was not held due lack of quorum. Council member Babakir Sdiq, speaking to KirkukNow said, “The absence of members at the meeting is a violation of the law, because we set a date for the meeting in a vote in the previous meeting.”

This became the first and last meeting of the provincial council during the past two years, despite numerous failed attempts to convene.

The Kirkuk provincial council consisted of 41 members; the Kurdish Brotherhood list (26 members), the Turkmens with both Sunni and Shiite sects (9 members) and the Arab bloc (6 members). A quorum was achieved in the presence of at least 21 members.

13 council members never participated in any meetings or activities since October 2017.

11 of the absentees were pro-KDP (Kurdistan Democratic Party) members which decided to boycott the council meetings; some of these members have resided in Kurdistan Region cities or outside Iraq. The list of absentees also included acting head of the council Rebwar Talabani-currently settled in Erbil- and another from the Chaldean-Assyrian component who lives abroad.

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Kirkuk- A residential street rehabilitation project in Rahimawa neighborhood, August 2019   Photo: provincial council media 

Despite that at least 27 council members live in Kirkuk and showed up at the provincial council office, they failed to hold a regular meeting.

Each member of the Kirkuk Provincial Council received a monthly salary of 2.3 million IQD in addition to allocations estimated at 600,000 IQD for transportation costs; meanwhile, another 90,000 dinars per month went for Internet and mobile recharge cards.

According to information obtained by KirkukNow, since late 2017, in which a single council meeting was held, the total sum of the money allocated for the salaries, transportation costs and internet and mobile recharge cards of all the councilors reached nearly 3 billion Iraqi dinars.

 

A corruption went unpunished

According to Iraqi laws, including the Provincial Councils’ Act No. 21 issued in 2008 for provinces not associated within a region, the provincial councils are the supreme legislative and supervisory authority within their borders, and have the authority to legislate internal laws to administer their areas.

The Kirkuk provincial council was established in accordance with Resolution 71 issued in 2005 by Paul Bremer the then Administrator of the Coalition Provisional Authority of Iraq.

Jamal Mawloud Bapeer, 82, who was elected as interim head of the Kirkuk provincial council in January 2019, said,“according to the internal regulations and procedure of the provincial council, council member’s absence period should not exceed 21 days, or else he or she would be held accountable.”

He added that “because of disputes between the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), or between Arabs and Turkmens, some members of the council do not attend the sessions, and this leads to the disruption of the work of the council.”

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Jamal Mawloud, interim head of the Kirkuk provincial council   Photo: provincial council media 

Four Key tasks awaited the council

The council was expected to tackle four key issues: the ratification of the budget, the election of a new governor, the follow-up of the work of government departments and ensuring accountability, yet none of these was fulfilled.

As the Council failed to complete the quorum to elect a new governor, it also failed to approve the province's 2019 budget. Eventually the budget bill was approved after collecting signatures and resorting to Baghdad authorities.

Despite all this, there was a few number of council members who went to their offices on a daily basis and carried out routine tasks.

KirkukNow learned that the Iraqi Commission of Integrity had moved the cases of councilors who did not attend the council meetings, but it did not result in the reactivatin of this crucial institution. 

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