Abdul Muhsin al-Sa'dun explained

Abdul Muhsin al-Sa'doun
Office:Prime Minister of Iraq
Term Start3:20 November 1922
Term End3:22 November 1923
Monarch3:Faisal I
Predecessor3:Abd Al-Rahman Al-Gillani
Successor3:Jafar al-Askari
Term Start2:26 June 1925
Term End2:21 November 1926
Monarch2:Faisal I
Predecessor2:Yasin al-Hashimi
Successor2:Ja'far al-Askari
Term Start1:11 January 1928
Term End1:28 April 1929
Monarch1:Faisal I
Predecessor1:Ja'far al-Askari
Successor1:Tawfiq al-Suwaidi
Term Start:19 September 1929
Term End:13 November 1929
Predecessor:Tawfiq al-Suwaidi
Successor:Naji al-Suwaydi
Birthname:Abd al-Muhsin bin Fahad al-Sa'doun
Birth Date:1879
Birth Place:Nasiriyah, Basra Vilayet, Ottoman Empire
Death Place:Baghdad, Kingdom of Iraq
Party:The Progressive Party
Children:2
Alma Mater:Ottoman Military Academy
Branch:Ottoman Army
Unit:Infantry
Rank:Binbashi (1905–1909)
Second Lieutenant (1909)
Honorific Prefix:Sir
Native Name:عبد المحسن السعدون
Native Name Lang:ar

Sir Abdul Muhsin al-Sa‘doun, KCMG (Arabic: عبد المحسن السعدون; 1879 – 13 November 1929) was an Iraqi politician who served as Prime Minister of Iraq on four occasions between 1922 and 1929.

Background and early career

Abd al-Muhsin al-Sa'doun hailed from a family descended from the Sa'douns, the most powerful tribe within the Muntafiq Confederation.[1] In the mid-nineteenth century, the Ottoman Empire fostered rivalries between the dominant Sa'dun chiefs by offering enticing land deals to the highest bidders among them, pursuant to a policy of tribal weakening and division. In 1871 Midhat Pasha finally split the chiefs in two between "Ottomanizers" and their opponents by offering some chiefs permanent ownership of once communal tribal lands, when, previously, they could only exact tribute from farmers. The tribal chiefs then grew very wealthy by converting the rest of the tribe into tenant farmers for their exploitation.[1]

When the United Kingdom took Iraq from the Ottomans following World War I, it pursued a policy whereby it lavished political and economic favours on tribal leaders in order to encourage them to exert their influence in ways conducive to British economic designs in the country. Al-Sa'doun was one of many to consistently obtain seats in Parliament in exchange for this service. Notably, however, while many tribal leaders at the time were provincial in outlook, al-Sa'doun was distinguished by being a sayyid (a descent from the Prophet Muhammad), and by having broadened his horizons at the Military Academy in Istanbul. Al-Sa'doun served as a military officer during Ottoman control of the country, as an aide-de-camp to Sultan Abd-ul-Hamid II, and as a ten-year member of the Ottoman Parliament.[2] Afterward, he returned to Iraq and embarked on a career as an influential politician.

Time in Parliament

Al-Sa'dun was a shrewd politician with many tribal and British connections, as demonstrated by his control over the Parliamentary alliance known as the Progressives. This made him one of King Faisal's most bitter rivals, as he frequently acted as an instrument of British supremacy over the Iraqi interests Faisal was trying to pursue.[1] In 1923, he suppressed a Shi'a movement calling for election boycotts.[1] He was President of the Constituent Assembly in 1924.[3] Then, in 1926, he assured the application of the unequal twenty-five-year "Financial and Military Agreement" between Iraq and Britain in spite of its unpopularity.[1]

He was elected as the president of the Chamber of Deputies from 1926 to 1928 and in 1929.[4] [5]

During his third term as prime minister, al-Sa'doun also negotiated the Treaty of Ankara in which Iraq promised to pay Turkey 10% of its revenues from the Mosul oil fields in return for Turkish recognition of Iraqi control of the area. By December 1928, popular protest over British domination of Iraq had become more fervid, and al-Sa'doun began to support King Faisal's demands for more autonomy. He resigned in protest in January 1929.[1]

Death

On 13 November 1929, during his fourth term in office, al-Sa'doun died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. His actions were considered to be a consequence of the criticism he had received from the Iraqi population and, subsequently, the British and international community for his "disloyalty". He left behind a letter to his son stating, "I have suffered with forbearance all possible insults and contempt".[6]

Legacy

In his memory, the street where he was killed became known officially as "al-Sa'doun Street" and a bronze statue dedicated to him was built in the street.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Batatu, Hanna . The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq . 1978 . Princeton University Press . 0691052417 . 21622322M .
  2. Book: Suwaydi, Tawfiq . وجوه عراقية عبر التاريخ . Iraqi Faces from the Past . Arabic . 1987 . Riyadh al-Rayyis Publishers . 9781869844431 . 8649495M.
  3. Report by His Britannic Majesty's Government to the Council of the League of Nations on the Administration of Iraq . . 1923–1924 .
  4. Report by His Britannic Majesty's Government to the Council of the League of Nations on the Administration of Iraq . . 1926 .
  5. Report by His Britannic Majesty's Government to the Council of the League of Nations on the Administration of Iraq . . 1929 .
  6. Book: Sinderson, Sir Harry Chapman . Ten Thousand and One Nights: Memories of Iraq's Sherifian Dynasty . 1973 . Hodder and Stoughton Press . 9780340176184 . 10616469M.
  7. Web site: Limited . Elaph Publishing . 2008-02-11 . شارع السعدون شجرة الحزن تمطر مواويل بكاء . 2023-09-16 . Elaph - إيلاف . ar.