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The '''IRR Eastern Line''', alternatively the '''Baghdad-Erbil Railway''' was a metre-gauge railway connecting ] and ] via ] and ] in ]. It was part of the ] network. It ran roughly 60 km east parallel to the ], but it ran on the left bank of the ]. It was the last railway of its kind in Iraq.
{{Orphan|date=December 2024}}

The '''IRR Eastern Line''', alternatively the '''Baghdad-Erbil Railway''' was a metre-gauge railway connecting ] and ] via ] and ] in ]. It was part of the ] network. It ran roughly 60 km east parallel to the ], but it ran on the left bank of the ]. It was the last railway of its type in Iraq.


{{IRR Eastern Line}} {{IRR Eastern Line}}

Revision as of 23:55, 29 December 2024

The IRR Eastern Line, alternatively the Baghdad-Erbil Railway was a metre-gauge railway connecting Baghdad and Erbil via Baqubah and Kirkuk in Iraq. It was part of the Iraqi Republic Railways network. It ran roughly 60 km east parallel to the Baghdad Railway, but it ran on the left bank of the Tigris. It was the last railway of its kind in Iraq.

IRR Eastern Line
Legend
Baghdad To Erbil
km approx. time
Baghdad West
Sarrafiya Bridge (only from 1951 to 1970)
0 Baghdad North 0:00
3 Baghdad East
4 Gailani K.O.C. Depot
9 Tel Mohammed
10 Workshop 1st Liwa
11 Camp Rasheed
6 Tabouk Factory
11 Mile 7
13 Shammaiya
19 Sidaira
22 Safwa
26 Sha'ura
32 Mile 20
41 Khan Bani Sa'ad
49 Shifta
59 Baquba
65 Jassimiya
73 Abu Hawa
80 Um Aisha
86 Abu Jisra
92.5 Abu Saida
90 Abu Hasawiya
96 Meqdad
101 Muqdadiya/Shahraban
105 Table Mountain
110 Mansur
116 Tel Jebel
125 Kurdara
130 Zawiya
138 Sadiya
148 Jalawla
Jalawla Junction
152 Sheikh Yusif
155 Halwan
159 Sheikh Jasim
161 Tel Ali
163 Rahamla/Ranalima
166 Bablawi
175 Khanaqin
Border Iraq/Iran
210 Quretu
150 Mile 93/15
163 Kashkul
173 Qara-Tepe
178 Kara Yakat/Karaya Takh
194 Maleh and Zardaf
199 Eski Kifri
206 Dwaidan/Duddan
215 Tel Menzil
226 Suleyman Beg
236 I.P.C. Camp
237 Tuz Khormatu
246 Albu Sabbah
254 Para Para
264 Iftikhar
277 Ali Serai
295 Bashir
307 Chardaghlu
322 Kirkuk
324 I.P.C.
I.P.C. Junction
325 I.P.C. Exchange
328 I.P.C. Cabin
331 Baba Gurgur
334 K.1
345 Buyuk Hissar
378 Altun Kupri
401 Hamza Kore
427 Erbil
I.P.C.=Iraq Petroleum Company

History

Construction and operation

The idea of constructing a railway line from Baghdad to Kirkuk was discussed in the latter half of the 19th century. However, the project was delayed due to the disruptions caused by World War I. After the Britsh received the Mandate for Mesopotamia in 1918, the Baghdad Quraitu Railway commenced construction, with work on the Kirkuk Railway Station beginning six years later in 1925. The foundations for the Kirkuk-Baghdad-Haifa Railway were laid starting in 1930. The section connecting Baghdad to Haifa was eventually abandoned because of the outbreak of the Arab-Israeli War . Still, the Mesopotamian Railways continued the construction of the railway line towards Kirkuk, from Quraitu onwards. After Kirkuk had been reached a 12 km long connection to the Baba Gurgur oil refinery was built from Kirkuk.

In 1949, the railway was extended by 105 kilometers to Erbil, with a new steel bridge crossing the Great Zab River near Al-Tun. By 1950, the first train arrived in Erbil. In 1963, a project to extend the railway further to Sulaymaniyah was initiated by Major General Saleh Zaki Tawfiq, the Iraqi director of railways. However, this plan was abandoned after the regime change in 1968.

Opening dates

Section Opening Date
Jaloula Junction–Eskikifri–Kingirban September 1919
Eskikifri–Tuz Khurmatu April 1925
Tuz Khurmatu–Kirkuk August 1925
Kirkuk–Baba Gurgur January 1947
Kirkuk–Erbil June 1949
The IRR Eastern Line in the Northwest of the map, with a false "Proposed Line" from Kirkuk to Mosul instead of Erbil.

Decommissioning

Main article: IRR Transversal Line

After 1968, the railway eventually lost importance due to political shifts in Iraq. During the Ba'athist regime, a similar plan to Saleh Zaki Tawfiq's was put forward to replace the existing railway with a new standard-gauge railway for interoperability with the IRR Southern and Northern, due to the retrofitting of the IRR Southern Line from metre-to standard-gauge in 1964, the old railway lost its interoperability. This plan included the idea of extending the line to Sulaymaniyah. However, after further planning and evaluation, it was decided to build a new standard-gauge railway from Kirkuk to Haditha, with an interchange at Baiji on the Berlin-Baghdad Railway, creating a faster connection to Baghdad from Kirkuk, making the old connection obsolete. Erbil and the rest of the Kurdistan Region slowly lost their rail service after the metre-gauge railway that connected them started closing in 1984 by the Office of the Presidency of the Iraqi Republic and finished on May 15, 1988. Other, unstated reasons were to not only connect Kirkuk better to other Sunni Arab areas in the west of Iraq to make Arabisation easier, as well as to cut off railway access to Kurdish areas following the autonomy of Iraqi Kurdistan in 1970. As a result, many landmarks along the old line, such as the Erbil Railway Terminal, the Baba Kiwan Junction, multiple bridges, and various facilities such as hotels and hospitals, were demolished.

A poster from the days of the metre-gauge railway.

References

  1. ^ Abdul Aziz, M.D. Dilshad Omar (July 2017). "تاريخ السكك الحديد في كركوك وأثره االقتصادي واالجتماعي" [History of the Railways in Kirkuk and their economic and social impact]. (مجلة علمية محكمة)مجلة الدراسات التاريخية و الحضارية [Journal of Historical and Cultural Studies(a peer-reviewed scientific journal)] (in Arabic). 9 (30): 38. Retrieved January 2, 2024.
  2. Robinson, S. 24.
  3. Robinson, Neil (August 2006). World Rail Atlas. World Rail Atlas Ltd. pp. 25 f. ISBN 978-954-12-0128-2.
  4. Grantham, Andrew (8 February 2014). "Railway lines in Iraq". andrewgrantham.co.uk. Retrieved January 2, 2024. A groundbreaking ceremony was held in Baiji on February 8, 1983. Ceremonial inauguration of the KBH in the presence of the then Minister of Communication Mr Mohammed Hamza Al Zubaidi on November 7, 1987 (not 1988).
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