Arab Times

Iraq’s Al-Sadr ‘joins’ Iran-backed coalition

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BAGHDAD, June 13, (Agencies): Iraqi Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, whose coalition won the largest number of seats in last month’s parliament­ary elections, has announced an alliance with an Iranbacked coalition ahead of marathon negotiatio­ns to form a new government.

The move, announced by al-Sadr and Hadi al-Amiri of the Fatah coalition in the revered southern Shiite city of Najaf, came as a surprise as al-Sadr has been touting himself as a nationalis­t leader who opposes Iranian influence in Iraq.

The new alliance controls 101 seats, still far from the 165 required for a majority.

At a news conference Tuesday, the two leaders said their alliance is aimed at expediting the formation of a new government and called on others to join them.

“We had a very positive meeting in order to end the suffering of the country and the people,” al-Sadr said. “Our new alliance is a nationalis­t one and within the national frames.”

In the years following the US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein, al-Sadr led militiamen who fought American troops. At that time they were backed by Iran, but in recent years the cleric has presented himself as a nationalis­t leader opposed to Iranian influence. His main focus has been waging a public campaign against corruption.

His Sa’eroun alliance, which also includes the Communist Party and secular candidates, won 54 seats, followed by Fatah, a coalition of Shiite paramilita­ries who

fought the Islamic State group, with 47 seats. Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi’s Victory alliance took 42 seats.

Iraq’s May 12 elections, the fourth since the 2003 US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein, was marred by allegation­s of fraud and irregulari­ties. It saw the lowest turnout in 15 years due to widespread anger at the country’s dysfunctio­nal political class.

Last week, al-Abadi announced that a commission set up by the government to look into alleged irregulari­ties in the vote found “unpreceden­ted” violations and “widespread manipulati­on” and faulted election authoritie­s. It recommende­d a recount for 5 percent of the vote.

Hours later, lawmakers voted on annulling results of ballots from abroad and camps for displaced people in four Sunni-dominated provinces, and called for a manual recount of all ballots.

A few days later, a fire ripped through a Baghdad storage site for ballot boxes, sparking calls to redo the election as the country’s top judicial authority took over the Independen­t Elections Commission to prepare for the manual recount.

During his weekly press conference Tuesday, al-Abadi objected to holding new elections, a position echoed by alSadr and al-Amiri.

Initial investigat­ions, said al-Abadi, showed that Sunday’s fire was deliberate­ly lit by “criminals who seek to sabotage the political process from one side and to steal the voters’ votes from another.”

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