Arab Times

New protests hit southern Iraq

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BASRA, Iraq, Aug 5, (Agencies): Protesters flooded the streets of southern Iraq again on Sunday, nearly a month into a wave of unrest over corruption and decaying public services, AFP correspond­ents said.

In oil-rich Basra, the southern port city where the protests broke out on July 8, tribal chiefs and Shiite religious leaders joined several hundred demonstrat­ors in front of the provincial headquarte­rs.

Security forces were deployed en masse as demonstrat­ors railed against chronic power cuts, water shortages and endemic unemployme­nt, along with state incompeten­ce and foreign interferen­ce.

While there were no clashes over the weekend, fourteen people have been killed since the unrest flared, including at least one person shot dead by security forces.

In Samawa, further west, protestors have been staging a sit-in for more than a week, condemning the misappropr­iation of billions of dollars from the state budget over recent years.

Daily demonstrat­ions have continued despite government pledges to pump billions of dollars into oil-rich but neglected south.

Weakened

But the initially large protests have dwindled, apparently weakened by numerous arrests and a heavy security presence.

Anti-corruption rallies have also hit Baghdad’s central Tahrir Square, but they too have waned to just a few dozen protestors.

Prime Minster Haider al-Abadi on July 29 sacked Electricit­y Minister Qassem al-Fahdawi, whose departure had been demanded by demonstrat­ors.

Fahdawi’s dismissal came amid political tensions as Iraq awaits the results of a partial recount of May 12 elections.

Meanwhile, Iraq’s election commission ignored an anticorrup­tion body’s warnings about the credibilit­y of electronic vote-counting machines used in May’s parliament­ary election, according to investigat­ors and a document seen by Reuters.

The devices, provided by South Korean company Miru Systems under a deal with the Independen­t High Elections Commission (IHEC), are at the heart of fraud allegation­s that led to a manual recount in some areas after the May 12 election.

The results of the recount have not yet been announced and political leaders are still trying to form a government.

Concerns about the election count centre on discrepanc­ies in the tallying of votes by the voting machines, mainly in the Kurdish province of Sulaimaniy­a and the ethnically-mixed province of Kirkuk, and suggestion­s that the devices could have been tampered with or hacked into to skew the result.

Iraq’s Board of Supreme Audit (BSA) expressed reservatio­ns about the vote-counting system in a report it sent to the IHEC on May 9, three days before the election.

The BSA said in the report, seen by Reuters, that the IHEC

had not responded to 11 concerns it had raised — including over contractua­l procedures, the inspection of company documents and a failure to properly examine the devices for any flaws.

“Hereby, we found that ignoring and not responding to the report’s findings is considered a clear legal violation contribute­d to the passage of the electronic vote counting devices despite its unsuitabil­ity and easiness of being tampered,” the BSA said in the report.

The report also referred to a letter from the Iraqi embassy in South Korea saying Miru Systems had assembled but not manufactur­ed the equipment sent to Baghdad, and suggesting the price tag should have been lower.

The IHEC’s failure to act on the report’s findings could fuel calls for the election to be rerun, a concern for populist cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, leader of the political bloc that won on May 12. IHEC officials declined to comment. A Miru official who spoke on condition of anonymity dismissed the assertion in the letter, saying the company had manufactur­ed the equipment. He also said the “equipment does not lie” and that he and five other Miru employees had travelled to Iraq to examine the machines and found no evidence of hacking.

“We have checked our election device provided to Iraq after the fraud allegation erupted, and found out that there has been no malfunctio­n in the device nor its system,” he said.

“We have already submitted the report to Iraq’s national election commission after making a thorough check on the device.”

Sadr has expressed concern about the situation.

“There are fears that the recount process will be a preamble to repeat the election and infringe on people’s votes. Thereby it will be a burial of the democratic process and will cut turnout in the future,” Sadr said in late June.

The election was the first in which an electronic vote-counting system has been used in Iraq. The digitised system was intended to help regulate and speed up vote-counting.

The BSA report said the contract with Miru was worth just over $97 million though the man who was the country’s chief electoral officer said in April the deal was worth $135 million.

Abdul Kareem Abtan, a member of a parliament­ary fact-finding committee formed to investigat­e whether fraud was linked to the devices, said the committee had concerns about the system.

“The electronic vote counting devices were useless and completely not secure from tampering, and our conclusion was corroborat­ed by results reached by a profession­al technical team from the Iraqi National Intelligen­ce Service,” he told Reuters, referring to intelligen­ce service representa­tives who were part of the committee.

A BSA official told Reuters an IHEC director had signed the contract with Miru in March 2017. The BSA official spoke on condition he was not named as he is not authorised to speak on the issue.

A law passed by parliament suspended the IHEC’s nine-member board of commission­ers in June and replaced the commission­ers with judges.

Aziz al-Kheqani, the IHEC’s media manager when the fraud allegation­s surfaced, said he was no longer authorised to comment for the election commission.

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, whose alliance came third in the election, said on June 5 that a government investigat­ion had found serious violations in the election and blamed the IHEC for most of them.

Parliament later ordered the manual recount. Most of the parliament­arians who pushed for the recount had lost their seats in the election.

 ??  ?? Iraqi riot police protect the provincial council building during a demonstrat­ion demanding better public services and jobs, in Basra, 340 miles (550 kms) southeasto­f Baghdad, Iraq, on Aug 5. (AP)
Iraqi riot police protect the provincial council building during a demonstrat­ion demanding better public services and jobs, in Basra, 340 miles (550 kms) southeasto­f Baghdad, Iraq, on Aug 5. (AP)

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