A member of the Nineveh Provincial Council revealed About a meeting that included the head of the Nineveh Council and members of the Nineveh Future (Coordination Framework Alliances) at the home of MP Waad Al-Qaddo, to resolve the differences over the administrative units, stressing that the attendees threatened to question the governor if he did not issue orders to the heads of those units .

The “Nineveh Future” coalition has 16 seats in the Nineveh Provincial Council, which is predominantly Sunni, out of 29 seats, making the Coordination Framework the half plus one, as the coalition also includes “Progress” in addition to “Ataa, Babylon, the Patriotic Union, and Kut A. “

The member, who preferred not to reveal his name, to avoid embarrassment, said, “The members of the Nineveh Provincial Council within the Nineveh of the Future, headed by the Council Chairman Ahmed Al-Hasoud, discussed, during an invitation extended to them by Representative Waad Al-Qaddo at his home in the Bartella district, the upcoming entitlements of the framework in the council and the delay in issuing administrative orders to the heads of the administrative units .”

The source explained that “the meeting also included representatives from Nineveh within the Coordination Framework alliances, including Representative Mukhtar al-Moussawi and Abdul Rahim al-Shammari, who discussed the reasons for the delay in issuing administrative orders to the administrative units .”

He explained that “those in attendance formed a team to go to the Nineveh Governor to negotiate and determine the reasons for the delay in issuing administrative orders to the heads of administrative units .”

The member did not rule out that “the council will go to question the governor if efforts to negotiate with him to issue administrative orders fail .”

The Coordination Framework controls the political decision in Nineveh, which has a Sunni majority, through its alliances within the Nineveh Council, which includes Sunni figures but is linked to alliances tied to them in Baghdad, including members of Progress and Renewal, in addition to other alliances of the Coordination Framework.