The Phnom Penh Post

Iraq lawmakers fail to elect new president, again

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IRAQI lawmakers failed again on Saturday to elect a new president due to the lack of a quorum in parliament, keeping the country mired in political paralysis. Parliament had issued a final list of 40 candidates for the post, a largely ceremonial role that by convention is reserved for a member of Iraq's Kurdish minority.

The contest pits Barham Saleh, the incumbent and a member of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), against Rebar Ahmed of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), the PUK's rival.

But the lack of a quorum – set at twothirds of the house's 329 members – held up the vote for the second time since February, deepening war-scarred Iraq's political uncertaint­y.

Only 202 lawmakers showed up for the latest vote, a parliament­ary official told AFP on condition of anonymity, and a new session had to be scheduled for Wednesday.

Following the session, parliament speaker Mohammed al-Halbusi said the "lack of a quorum forces us to continue holding sessions until it is achieved", the state-owned Iraqi News Agency reported.

The postponeme­nt exacerbate­s Iraq's political problems because it is the task of the president to formally name a prime minister, who must be backed by an absolute majority in parliament.

On February 13, Iraq's supreme court ruled out a presidenti­al bid by KDP-backed veteran politician Hoshyar Zebari, after a complaint filed against him over years-old, untried corruption charges.

Iraqi politics were thrown into turmoil following last October's general election, which was marred by record low turnout, post-vote threats and violence, and a months-long delay before the final results were confirmed.

Intense negotiatio­ns among political factions have since failed to forge a majority in support of a new prime minister to succeed Mustafa al-Kadhemi.

The largest political bloc, led by firebrand Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr, had

backed Zebari for the presidency and has now thrown its weight behind Ahmed.

A first vote in parliament on February 7 failed to materialis­e as it was widely boycotted amid the Zebari legal wrangle.

Saturday's failed session underscore­d the sharp divide in Iraqi politics between Sadr, the general election's big winner, and the powerful Coordinati­on Framework, which had called for a boycott.

The Coordinati­on Framework includes

the pro-Iran Fatah Alliance – the political arm of the Shiite-led former paramilita­ry group Hashed al-Shaabi.

With the support of Sunni and Kurdish parties, Sadr wants the post of prime minister to go to his cousin Jaafar Sadr, Iraq's ambassador to Britain, once the question of the four-year presidency has been settled.

Ahead of Saturday's debacle, political analyst Ihsan al-Shammari had said that, even if the vote had gone ahead as planned, the presidency would "not be decided in the first round".

The candidate who wins the largest number of votes must secure a twothirds majority in a second round of voting in parliament to win the presidency.

Mohamed, a civil servant who preferred not to give his full name, blamed the political system for the aborted vote.

"The constituti­on itself was drafted incorrectl­y," he said. "As a result, the whole political process is full of mistakes."

 ?? AFP ?? Supporters of Iraqi Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr gather inside the Iraqi parliament in the capital Baghdad, ahead of the country's presidenti­al election, on Saturday.
AFP Supporters of Iraqi Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr gather inside the Iraqi parliament in the capital Baghdad, ahead of the country's presidenti­al election, on Saturday.

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