Who is Abdul Latif Rashid, the New President of Iraq?

Rashid taking the oath after his election, alongside Parliament Speaker Muhammad al-Halbousi (INA)
Rashid taking the oath after his election, alongside Parliament Speaker Muhammad al-Halbousi (INA)
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Who is Abdul Latif Rashid, the New President of Iraq?

Rashid taking the oath after his election, alongside Parliament Speaker Muhammad al-Halbousi (INA)
Rashid taking the oath after his election, alongside Parliament Speaker Muhammad al-Halbousi (INA)

Iraq’s newly elected president, Abdul Latif Jamal Rashid, joined the ranks of the Kurdistan Democratic Party in the 1960s, before engaging with the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan in the mid-1970s, within a student opposition movement.

Rashid was born on Aug. 10, 1944, in the Kurdistan region of Sulaymaniyah, where he completed his primary and secondary education. In 1962, he traveled to the United Kingdom, where he obtained a degree in civil engineering from the University of Liverpool in 1968, a master’s degree in water sciences, and later a doctorate from the University of Manchester in 1976.

Between his journeys in the two British cities, he spent years teaching at a university in his hometown, Sulaymaniyah.

Rashid worked with the British engineering consultancy firm, Sir William Halcrow & Partners, from 1971 to 1979, and participated in field projects in Saudi Arabia, Somalia and Yemen, until 1981, including projects affiliated with the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

According to his political biography, he became involved with Kurdish student opposition groups in Europe, which later led to the formation of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan. He became the party’s delegate in Britain, and its representative in a number of countries in the Old Continent.

Rashid was also one of the members of the Kurdish delegations that participated in the Iraqi opposition conferences, which were seeking to overthrow Saddam Hussein’s regime.

After the US forces invaded Iraq and ousted the Baath regime, Rashid returned to Baghdad to be appointed Minister of Water Resources from 2003 until 2010, before becoming a senior advisor to the President of the Republic.



Compensation Delays Leave Beirut Southern Suburbs’ Families in Ruined Homes

A man surveys the damage caused by Israeli airstrikes on the southern suburbs last week. (EPA)
A man surveys the damage caused by Israeli airstrikes on the southern suburbs last week. (EPA)
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Compensation Delays Leave Beirut Southern Suburbs’ Families in Ruined Homes

A man surveys the damage caused by Israeli airstrikes on the southern suburbs last week. (EPA)
A man surveys the damage caused by Israeli airstrikes on the southern suburbs last week. (EPA)

In Beirut’s southern suburbs, amid buildings scarred by war, residents continue to suffer from severe damage to their homes caused by the recent conflict.

In the Mrayjeh and Saint Therese neighborhoods, locals face a harsh reality of ruined houses, stalled compensation, and unfulfilled promises, while reconstruction projects remain frozen amid deep uncertainty.

In Mrayjeh, where the destruction still marks the walls of homes, Ali, a resident, told Asharq Al-Awsat about the near-total damage to his house.

He said: “After my home was almost completely destroyed, we were told there was an urgent reconstruction plan and that compensation would be paid within a few months. But the reality is completely different.”

“All we actually received was four months’ worth of shelter allowance starting in January, totaling no more than $2,000. After that, all aid stopped, and we have not received any financial support to repair the damage,” added Ali.

On the scale of his losses, Ali said: “My home is no longer habitable. It was completely damaged—from the walls to the floors, from water and electricity networks to furniture that was entirely ruined. I barely managed to salvage anything.”

“Yet, I have received no compensation for the losses. Since the damage occurred, I have been covering all costs out of my own pocket. So far, I’ve spent more than $10,000, and I’m still at the beginning of the road. In my estimation, I need at least another $30,000 to restore the house to a livable condition.”

But the biggest shock came in recent weeks, when they were officially informed that restoration work in the building was halted “until further notice.”

Ali explained that the entity responsible for the repairs, appointed by Hezbollah, told them bluntly: “Funding has stopped, so no work can continue. All they managed to do was reinforce a support wall on the ground floor, then they stopped and left as if nothing happened.”

The building is now at risk of total collapse, with many families either displaced or living in inhumane conditions.

Regarding their appeals to the authorities, Ali said: “All our inquiries receive the same response: ‘There is no funding currently, please wait.’”