Haidar Al Abadi: from an exile to Iraq’s next premier

Mr Al Abadi was communications minister in the interim government set up after the 2003 overthrow of Saddam Hussein, and is a member of Maliki’s Dawa party.

Haider Al Abadi speaks to the media after an Iraqi parliament session in Baghdad on July 15, 2014. Mr Al Abadi, the deputy speaker, was chosen on August 11, 2014, by Iraq's largest coalition of Shiite political parties as its candidate for prime minister. Hadi Mizban / AP Photo
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BAGHDAD // Haidar Al Abadi, who was nominated Monday as Iraq's next premier, is a former exile and long-serving MP who was close to Nouri Al Maliki until he took his job.
"The country is in your hands," President Fuad Masum told Mr Al Abadi after accepting his nomination by parliament's Shiite alliance in a move slammed by Mr Al Maliki, who insists he is being robbed of a third term.
Mr Al Abadi was communications minister in the interim government set up after the 2003 overthrow of Saddam Hussein, and is a member of Maliki's Dawa party.
"Up until recently, he's been a Maliki surrogate," said Kirk Sowell, the Amman-based publisher of the Inside Iraqi Politics newsletter.
"I have never seen much daylight between the two of them."
M Al Abadi, who was born in 1952, was elected to parliament in 2006, chairing the Economy, Investment and Reconstruction Committee and then the Finance Committee.
He was voted deputy parliament speaker in July, before being tapped to form the government.
"Haidar is a very friendly person, very down to earth," said Zaid Al Ali, a legal expert and the author of the book The Struggle for Iraq's Future.
"People ... accept that he's a very easy person to speak to. You don't need to look over your shoulder after speaking with him, you don't have to be worried about disagreeing with him," Ali said.
Like Mr Al Maliki and other senior politicians, the next PM spent years in exile before returning to Iraq.
Mr Al Abadi lived in Britain, where he graduated from Manchester University in 1981 with a doctorate in electronic and electrical engineering, remaining abroad for most of Saddam Hussein's rule.
In a biography on his website, Mr Al Abadi said that two of his brothers were arrested by the dictator's regime in the early 1980s and executed for being members of Dawa, which opposed Saddam.
A third brother was arrested and jailed for 10 years on the same charge.
If he is successful in forming a government in the next 30 days, Mr Al Abadi will face enormous challenges as premier.
Iraq suffers from rampant corruption, has major shortfalls in basic services such as electricity and clean water, and is sharply divided along religious and ethnic lines.
But the greatest of all will be security, with jihadist-led insurgents in control of large areas of five Iraqi provinces, and hundreds of people killed in attacks each month.
Maliki sought to address violence, which has been on the rise since April 2013, with military force, making little in the way of concessions to his opponents, especially members of the country's Sunni Arab minority.
But without reaching out to Iraqi Sunnis and giving them a significant stake in politics and government, it will be extremely difficult to bring the violence plaguing the country under some semblance of control.
* Agence France-Presse