<p>Iraq's new President Abdul Latif Rashid is a veteran Kurdish politician and former water minister with valuable experience in navigating the fractious politics of Baghdad.</p>.<p>The 78-year-old, British-educated hydraulic engineer, chosen by parliament on Thursday to replace Barham Saleh, also faces the task of mending ties between the central government and Iraq's Kurdish minority.</p>.<p>Rashid's first order of business is to nominate a prime minister to form a government to replace caretaker premier Mustafa al-Kadhemi, filling a year-long political vacuum since an October 2021 general election.</p>.<p>He had served as presidential adviser since 2010, after seven years as a minister.</p>.<p>"Rashid's strengths would be that he is no stranger to Baghdad," said political analyst Hamzeh Hadad, a visiting fellow at the European Council of Foreign Relations.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/energy-crisis-feared-by-europe-a-reality-in-iraq-1150830.html" target="_blank">Energy crisis feared by Europe a reality in Iraq</a></strong></p>.<p>"Nothing should be new to him, even if he will be a new face to younger Iraqis."</p>.<p>Hailing from Sulaimaniyah, a major city in northern Iraq's northern autonomous Kurdistan region, he speaks Kurdish, Arabic and English.</p>.<p>He served as water resources minister until 2010 -- experience that could be valuable for Iraq, ravaged by drought and considered the fifth-most vulnerable country to climate change, according to the United Nations.</p>.<p>Since Saddam Hussein was toppled in 2003, an informal arrangement holds that a Shiite Muslim becomes prime minister, a Sunni serves as parliament speaker and a Kurd holds the presidency.</p>.<p>The largely symbolic post of president had been held since 2018 by Saleh of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK).</p>.<p>Rashid, also of the PUK, ran for president as an independent, is close to the party's founder, Jalal Talabani.</p>.<p>While the pro-Iran Shiite Muslim bloc the Coordination Framework pushes to form a government, Rashid emerged in the last stretch of the presidential race.</p>.<p>Rashid became water resources minister in 2003, serving in the first government put in place following the US-led invasion that ousted Saddam.</p>.<p>His election comes at a time when rival Shiite factions are vying for influence in Baghdad.</p>.<p>In multi-faith, multi-ethnic Iraq, "he has a good standing with both Shiite and Sunni politicians", said a government official close to Rashid.</p>.<p>He is "respected" by the faction of influential Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr, the official added.</p>.<p>He is also close to former prime minister Nuri al-Maliki, a prominent figure in the Coordination Framework, which is powerful in parliament.</p>.<p>Rashid will face the daunting task of breathing new life into fraught relations between the central government and the autonomous Kurdish region.</p>.<p>"Barham Saleh will have left a mark of being a charismatic president, but that did little to improve ties between Baghdad and Iraqi Kurdistan," analyst Hadad said.</p>.<p>"If Latif Rashid is able to improve that, then that will overshadow anything his predecessor did."</p>.<p>Born in 1944, Rashid studied in Britain, earning degrees from Liverpool and Manchester, and obtained a doctorate in hydraulic engineering in 1976.</p>.<p>He returns to issues he dealt with as minister: disputes with neighbouring Turkey over sharing waters of the Euphrates and Tigris rivers and the struggle to rescue the dried up marshes of southern Iraq, a UNESCO World Heritage site.</p>.<p>A father of three, Rashid is keen on painting and opened a gallery in Sulaimaniyah in 2014, showcasing the works of local artists.</p>
<p>Iraq's new President Abdul Latif Rashid is a veteran Kurdish politician and former water minister with valuable experience in navigating the fractious politics of Baghdad.</p>.<p>The 78-year-old, British-educated hydraulic engineer, chosen by parliament on Thursday to replace Barham Saleh, also faces the task of mending ties between the central government and Iraq's Kurdish minority.</p>.<p>Rashid's first order of business is to nominate a prime minister to form a government to replace caretaker premier Mustafa al-Kadhemi, filling a year-long political vacuum since an October 2021 general election.</p>.<p>He had served as presidential adviser since 2010, after seven years as a minister.</p>.<p>"Rashid's strengths would be that he is no stranger to Baghdad," said political analyst Hamzeh Hadad, a visiting fellow at the European Council of Foreign Relations.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/energy-crisis-feared-by-europe-a-reality-in-iraq-1150830.html" target="_blank">Energy crisis feared by Europe a reality in Iraq</a></strong></p>.<p>"Nothing should be new to him, even if he will be a new face to younger Iraqis."</p>.<p>Hailing from Sulaimaniyah, a major city in northern Iraq's northern autonomous Kurdistan region, he speaks Kurdish, Arabic and English.</p>.<p>He served as water resources minister until 2010 -- experience that could be valuable for Iraq, ravaged by drought and considered the fifth-most vulnerable country to climate change, according to the United Nations.</p>.<p>Since Saddam Hussein was toppled in 2003, an informal arrangement holds that a Shiite Muslim becomes prime minister, a Sunni serves as parliament speaker and a Kurd holds the presidency.</p>.<p>The largely symbolic post of president had been held since 2018 by Saleh of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK).</p>.<p>Rashid, also of the PUK, ran for president as an independent, is close to the party's founder, Jalal Talabani.</p>.<p>While the pro-Iran Shiite Muslim bloc the Coordination Framework pushes to form a government, Rashid emerged in the last stretch of the presidential race.</p>.<p>Rashid became water resources minister in 2003, serving in the first government put in place following the US-led invasion that ousted Saddam.</p>.<p>His election comes at a time when rival Shiite factions are vying for influence in Baghdad.</p>.<p>In multi-faith, multi-ethnic Iraq, "he has a good standing with both Shiite and Sunni politicians", said a government official close to Rashid.</p>.<p>He is "respected" by the faction of influential Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr, the official added.</p>.<p>He is also close to former prime minister Nuri al-Maliki, a prominent figure in the Coordination Framework, which is powerful in parliament.</p>.<p>Rashid will face the daunting task of breathing new life into fraught relations between the central government and the autonomous Kurdish region.</p>.<p>"Barham Saleh will have left a mark of being a charismatic president, but that did little to improve ties between Baghdad and Iraqi Kurdistan," analyst Hadad said.</p>.<p>"If Latif Rashid is able to improve that, then that will overshadow anything his predecessor did."</p>.<p>Born in 1944, Rashid studied in Britain, earning degrees from Liverpool and Manchester, and obtained a doctorate in hydraulic engineering in 1976.</p>.<p>He returns to issues he dealt with as minister: disputes with neighbouring Turkey over sharing waters of the Euphrates and Tigris rivers and the struggle to rescue the dried up marshes of southern Iraq, a UNESCO World Heritage site.</p>.<p>A father of three, Rashid is keen on painting and opened a gallery in Sulaimaniyah in 2014, showcasing the works of local artists.</p>