Aref Tayfour is the Deputy Speaker of the Iraqi National Assembly. A member of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, he was elected to the post by the Assembly on 22 April. He also served as the Deputy President of the National Assembly under the Iraqi Transitional Government. The Iraqi National Assembly is the unicameral parliament of Iraq which meets in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad. ... The Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP; Kurdish: Partiya Demokrat a Kurdistanê or PDK) is a Kurdish political party led by Massoud Barzani. ... April 22 is the 112th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (113th in leap years). ... This article needs to be updated. ...
He was born in Dokan, As Sulaymaniyah Governorate, Iraqi Kurdistan in 1954. He graduated in law from Baghdad University in 1970. He originally joined the Hiywa Kurdish party before joining the KDP in 1967. He fled to Iran in 1974 and then to Austria. He returned to Iraqi Kurdistan in 1991. In 2003 he returned to Baghdad to lead the KDP's branch. As SulaymÄnÄ«yah province is a province of Iraq, within the Kurdish Autonomous Region. ... Anthem: Ey Reqîb (English: Hey Guardian) Capital Arbil Largest city Erbil Kurdish, Arabic, (Assyrian (Syriac)) and (Iraqi Turkmen) Government Parliamentary Democracy - Prime Minister Nechervan Idris Barzani - President Masoud Barzani Formation of Autonomous Region - Autonomy Accord Agreement is Signed March 11, 1970 - Autonomy Accord Collapses March 1974 - Gained de facto... Baghdad University is a war-torn school in Baghdad, Iraq which is currently open, but on a very sporadic basis, suffering frequent power outages and terrorist attacks. ... Anthem: Ey Reqîb (English: Hey Guardian) Capital Arbil Largest city Erbil Kurdish, Arabic, (Assyrian (Syriac)) and (Iraqi Turkmen) Government Parliamentary Democracy - Prime Minister Nechervan Idris Barzani - President Masoud Barzani Formation of Autonomous Region - Autonomy Accord Agreement is Signed March 11, 1970 - Autonomy Accord Collapses March 1974 - Gained de facto...
Iraqi members of the National Assembly watch the board as votes are counted to elect a Speaker and two deputies during a meeting of the National Assembly in Baghdad's Green Zone.
Once the president and his deputies are selected, they have 14 days to choose a prime minister, the most powerful position in Iraq's envisioned government hierarchy.
Voting was by paper ballot, with each legislator allowed to select as many as three names to fill the posts of speaker and two deputies.
In last-minute deal making on Saturday and Sunday morning, the leaders of the top political parties settled on Hajim al-Hassani, a prominent Sunni Arab and the minister of industry in the interim government, as speaker.
They selected Hussain Shahristani, a nuclear physicist and leading Shiite Arab, and ArefTaifour, a Kurd, as the two deputies.
Speaker of the assembly is a largely ceremonial post, and so the step the assembly took was more symbolic than substantive.