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Bank and Public Holidays for
Iraq
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Related and neighboring countries: Asia Iran Jordan Kuwait Saudi Arabia Syria Turkey
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Iraq bank
holidays, national holidays and public holidays for 2012, from
the Q++ Worldwide Public Holidays Database,
the professional source of international public holidays long trusted by
the world's
foremost diary publishers. The information on this page is provided for
private, non-professional, use. |
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Date in 2012 |
Holiday Name |
Observance* |
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Sun |
New Year's Day (Sovereignty Day)
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Fri |
Army Day (1921) (except Kurdistan)
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Sun |
Moulad (The Prophet's Birthday)
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Mon |
Rebellion Anniversary (1991) (Kurdistan)
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Regional |
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Wed |
Nowruz (Persian New Year) (Kurdistan)
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Regional |
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Mon |
Public Holiday (Baghdad) (Arab Summit)
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Regional |
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Tue |
Public Holiday (Baghdad) (Arab Summit)
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Regional |
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Wed |
Public Holiday (Baghdad) (Arab Summit)
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Regional |
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Thu |
Public Holiday (Baghdad) (Arab Summit)
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Regional |
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Fri |
Public Holiday (Baghdad) (Arab Summit)
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Regional |
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Mon |
Baghdad Liberation Day (Kurdistan)
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Regional |
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Tue |
Labor Day
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Sat |
Republic Day
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Sun |
Eid al Fitr (End of Ramadan)
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Mon |
Eid al Fitr Holiday
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Tue |
Eid al Fitr Holiday
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Banks |
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Wed |
National Iraqi Day
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Fri |
Eid al Adha (Feast of Sacrifice)
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Sat |
Eid al Adha Holiday
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Sun |
Eid al Adha Holiday
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Mon |
Eid al Adha Holiday
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Thu |
Islamic New Year
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Sat |
Ashura
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Mon |
Iraq Day (tentative)
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© 1989-2012 Alter Ego
Services |
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For professional and corporate use, you can license our database of worldwide and Iraq
public holidays and bank holidays for 2012 and future years (2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, and beyond). For details, please visit our licensing information
page or
contact us. |
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Recent News and Updates |
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25 Mar 2012 (Aswat Al Iraq-Baghdad) The Iraqi Federal Government has finally announced that the whole of next week (March 26-30, 2012) would be one-off non-working public holidays due to the upcoming Arab Summit.
16 Mar 2012 (Al Sumaria News-Baghdad) The Iraqi Director of Traffic Department, Major General Issam Hassan, has announced that, despite earlier announcements, neither Wednesday March 28, nor Thursday March 29, 2012, would be one-off non-working public holidays due to the upcoming Arab Summit.
07 Mar 2012 (Al Sabaah-Baghdad) The Iraqi parliament has introduced. for a first reading, legislation aimed at, once again, overhauling and hopefully simplifying the official list of non-working public holidays in Iraq.
09 Feb 2012 (Al Sumaria News-Baghdad) The Iraqi Interior Ministry has announced that Thursday, March 29, 2012, the date of the upcoming Arab Summit hosted in Baghdad, would be a one-off municipal non-working public holiday.
01 Feb 2012 (National Iraqi News Agency-NINA) The General Secretariat of the Iraqi Council of Ministers has announced that the date of the upcoming Prophet's Birthday non-working public holiday in Iraq would be Sunday, February 5, 2012.
19 Jan 2012 (National Iraqi News Agency-NINA) Iraq's Najaf provincial council has announced that it had declared Saturday and Sunday, January 21 and 22, 2012, as regional public holidays on account of the upcoming anniversary of the death of Prophet Mohammad.
05 Jan 2012 (National Iraqi News Agency-NINA) Iraq's Babylon governorate Council has announced that it had decided to declare Wednesday and Thursday, January 11 and 12, 2012, as a non-working provincial public holiday.
30 Dec 2011 (National Iraqi News Agency-NINA) Iraq's Prime Minister, Nuri al-Maliki, has declared tomorrow, Saturday, December 31, 2011, as a non-working national public holiday, to be named "Iraq Day".
24 Nov 2011 (National Iraqi News Agency-NINA) Iraq's Secretariat of the Council of Ministers has announced that Sunday, November 27, 2011, would be an official public holiday on account of the upcoming Hijra new year 1433.
01 Nov 2011 (National Iraqi News Agency-NINA) The Secretariat of the Iraqi Council of Ministers has announced that the upcoming Eid al-Adha (Feast of Sacrifice) public holidays would run from Sunday, November 6, until Thursday, November 10, 2011, inclusively.
More News Updates For the full version of the summarized news items above, and older news items not displayed above, go to the Iraq public holidays news and updates page, or worldwide public holidays news and updates page, or subscribe to one of our free email newsletters. |
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Background Information |
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Governing Law: On May 8, 2007, the Council of Ministers repealed the previous Holidays And Public Holidays No.110 of 1972, in particular canceling the February 8, and July 17, public holidays.
Weekends: Article 3 of the aforementioned cabinet decree instituded Fridays and Saturdays as weekends in Iraq. In addition most offices work only half days on Thursdays.
National Iraqi Day: This public holiday was created in early 2008 as a non-controversial date that would offend none of Iraq's sectarian groups. It commemorates the date when Iraq joined the League of Nations (the UN's predecessor) in 1932.
Eid al Adha (Feast of Sacrifice) is officially listed as a 2 day holiday by the U.S. Embassy but unofficially is celebrated for up to 5 days. It is listed as a 4 day holiday here since no official sources could be found that change it from when it was officially 4 days.
April 9 (anniversary of the fall of Baghdad and the regime of Saddam Hussein in 2003) or Baghdad Liberation Day was a public holiday in Iraq from 2004-2006 but was abolished, nationally in 2007. However, it remains an official public holiday in the Kurdish autonomous region, for all businesses, government offices, schools, universities and hospitals .
July 14: This public holiday, instituted in 2007, commemorates the 1958 revolution, led by Abdelkareem Qassem, who spearheaded the Free Officers Movement that turned Iraq from a monarchy into a republic.
Novruz: This is the new year celebrations which date back to Persian times and are held in various forms in Iran, Afghanistan and some former Soviet republics. Traditionally in Iraq the festival is marked by country gatherings where tradition reigns, from costumes to food to music and dance. Nouroz is considered one of the most important Kurdish festivals. In 2006, the government of the autonomous region of Kurdistan called a three day public holiday.
Caveats: Due to the lack of stability in the country, the consistency of public holidays will be in flux. Traditional Islamic public holidays will continue to be celebrated by various factions and will always be, regardless of what the long term government proclamations might be. In addition, many of the decrees related to Saddam-era holidays, are either ignored, or take many years to take effect (one glaring example, July 17, which the Governing Council voted to scrap in 2003, but which remained until 2007).
Religious Minorities: The draft law on public holidays of 2008 recognizes the rights of some religious minorities to observe their holidays.
• Christians: 25 December (although this was later declared a national public holiday)
• Jews: the Day of Atonement, Pessah, and the Feast of Tabernacles.
• Sabeans (Mandeans, tiny Gnostic sect that reveres John the Baptist) the Panja Feast, which is their major holiday on 7-8 August, and the little feast on 23 November.
• Yazidis, the first Friday of December of every year, the first Wednesday of April according to the Eastern calendar, 23-30 September according to the Eastern calendar, and 18-21 July according to the Eastern calendar.
Iraq International Codes IQ and IRQ (2 and 3-letter ISO3166 codes) and .iq (ICANN national top-level internet domain). • Other Sources of Information The following specialized websites are also a good source of Iraq information and news: Central Bank of Iraq (Iraq central bank), ASI Hot Spots (security-related world events: terrorist threats, political strife, strikes, criminal activity, aviation incidents and health outbreaks), CIA World Factbook (Iraq maps, demographics and economic statistics), the IFES (information covering upcoming elections, referenda, electoral structures and voter participation in Iraq), and Wikipedia (includes Iraq commemorative dates that are not necessarily public holidays). |
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Footnotes |
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Observance : Any entry in the Observance column indicates that, in Iraq, the holiday may be regional or non-official or limited to certain religious and/or linguistic groups, or begin at a time other than midnight. Note that religious holidays are included only if they are national public holidays, or if the national labour code has specific holiday allowances for employees of specific religions. For more information, see our pages on the religious calendars of the world. |
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Religious Holidays : Public holidays in Iraq that are based on certain religious calendars may be subject to local variations due to differing interpretations between different religious authorities, or to seemingly arbitrary changes in the date a holiday is celebrated because it conflicts with another holiday that is based on another calendar, or because the day of the holiday is deemed inauspicious (bad luck). To find out more about these uncertainties, see the footnote below, if any, for each specific religion. |
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(2) |
Muslim Holidays : Muslim bank holidays, legal holidays and public holidays for Iraq were evaluated using the Umm al-Qura Calendar of Saudi Arabia which is used in Saudi Arabia and in most of the Persian Gulf States. Holidays may occur a day later in countries outside the Gulf region. The sunrises, sunsets, moon phases, moonrises and moonsets used in these calculations are based on the location of Mecca (latitude 21.42°N, longitude, 39.82°E, GMT+3 hours, no summer time rules). For more details on Muslim holidays, see Muslim Calendar Holidays. For Salat (prayer times) calculations, see our Freeware page. |
Disclaimer
In many parts of
the world, holidays are subject to arbitrary, last minute, changes by local
authorities. While every effort has been made to present an accurate list of
2012 bank holidays, legal holidays and public holidays for Iraq, we
cannot accept any responsibility for any error or omission in the data presented
above. You are therefore advised to verify
the above dates with the embassy or consulate of Iraq, before planning any
trip to Iraq. For last-minute updates to worldwide public holidays, visit
our
worldwide public holidays news and updates page or subscribe to our free
email newsletters. |
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