He was born in 1922 in the city of Erbil, South Kurdistan to a prominent family of the city.
In the year 1943, he graduated from the College of Law at Baghdad University, Baghdad, capital of Iraq. During this period, he published many articles in newspapers and magazines in Baghdad.
In the year 1945, he retired as a lawyer and served as a district administrator in Khurmal, Bazian, Karadak, Laylan, Hawija and several other places.
In the year 1954 he was appointed governor of Zebar and later continued his work in Qaladze and Koya until 1958.
In August of 1958, he was appointed the mayor of Erbil.
After a while in Sulaymaniyah, he became an acting governor of the city and in early 1959 he was transferred to the office of the Ministry of Interior and gradually rose to become deputy minister of the interior.
He was arrested after the coup of 1963 and spent a year in prison.
After he was released, he immediately retired and returned to work as a lawyer.
In 1967, he was appointed a member of the board of directors of the Iraqi Bar Association. During a trip to participate in the Ninth Congress of Arab Lawyers, he visited Cairo, where he presented a memorandum on the Kurdish issue to the late Jamal Abdul Nasser, who was the president of Egypt at the time.
In 1971, he became a member of the Kurdish Cultural Association in Baghdad.
He was a talented writer and wrote more than 20 books in the fields of law and public culture.
He passed away in 1996.[1]