China Daily

Hints of coalition after Sadr meets with PM

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BAGHDAD — Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi met with Moqtada al-Sadr on Saturday, less than 24 hours after the Shiite cleric’s bloc was declared the winner of Iraq’s parliament­ary election, the clearest sign yet they could work together to form a coalition.

“During our meeting, we agreed to work together and with other parties to expedite the process of forming a new Iraqi government,” Abadi said at a joint news conference.

“It will be a strong government, capable of providing to its citizens services, security and economic prosperity.”

Sadr, a longtime adversary of the United States who also opposes Iranian influence in Iraq, cannot become prime minister because he did not run in the election.

However, his bloc’s victory puts him in a position to have a strong say in negotiatio­ns. His Sairoon electoral list captured 54 parliament­ary seats, 12 more than Abadi’s.

“Our door is open to anyone as long as they want to build the nation, and that it be an Iraqi decision,” Sadr said.

A bloc led by Hadi al-Amiri, one of the most powerful figures in Iraq, came in second. Amiri, who leads an umbrella of paramilita­ry groups, has maintained close ties with Iran for decades.

Winning the largest number of seats does not automatica­lly guarantee that Sadr will be able to handpick a prime minister.

Parties will have to align themselves to try and form a bloc large enough for the parliament­ary majority necessary to nominate a candidate. The government should be formed within 90 days of the official results, but negotiatio­ns are expected to drag on for months.

The election dealt a blow to Abadi, but he could still emerge as a compromise candidate palatable to all sides because he has managed the competing interests of the US and Iran during his term in office.

In recent days, Sadr also met with Ammar al-Hakim, whose Hikma Movement trailed in seventh place, as well as with ambassador­s from Iraq’s neighborin­g countries including Saudi Arabia, Teheran’s main rival in the Middle East.

Meanwhile, the Iraqi parliament on Saturday called for measures to instill confidence in the election process after complaints by political entities of alleged irregulari­ties and forgery.

Parliament speaker Salim al-Jubouri said the legislatur­e will send a letter to the Independen­t High Electoral Commission “to take all means that include confidence in the electoral process, including random (manual) counting”.

The measures also include “providing the political entities with photos of the results and to verify the process of matching the data with many ballot boxes, in addition to demanding the electoral judiciary panel to deal carefully and impartiall­y with the appeals submitted by the political entities,” Jubouri said.

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