The Borneo Post

Iraq voters rebuke PM’s party as rivals surge

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BAGHDAD: The race to become Iraq’s next prime minister appeared wide open yesterday as two outsider alliances looked to be in the lead after the first elections since the defeat of the Islamic State group.

According to partial official results obtained by AFP, the Marching Towards Reform alliance of Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr and his communist allies was ahead in six of Iraq’s 18 provinces and second in four others.

The Conquest Alliance, made up of ex- fighters from mainly Iranbacked paramilita­ry units that battled the Islamic State group, was ahead in four provinces and second in eight others.

After a vote Saturday that saw a record number of abstention­s, the Victory Alliance of Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, who has been backed by the internatio­nal community, looked to have won in only one province.

T he c ompl e x e l e c t o r a l arithmetic of the Iraqi system means that the final makeup of the parliament is still far from decided.

Whatever the outcome, there looks set to be lengthy horsetradi­ng between the main political forces before any new premier and government can be installed.

Abadi — who came to power as IS swept across Iraq in 2014 — is a consensus figure who has balanced off the United States and Iran.

The other leading challenger­s have often taken a stronger stance against the United States.

Several senior political figures had previously told AFP that preliminar­y results put Abadi in the lead, on course to scoop 60 of the 329 parliament­ary seats up for grabs.

The ballot Saturday saw a record low turnout, as only 44.5 per cent of eligible voters headed to the polls in the lowest participat­ion rate since the 2003 US-led ouster of Saddam Hussein.

After the announceme­nt that the Marching Towards Reform was ahead in Baghdad, supporters took the streets in the capital to celebrate a win.

Crowds of mainly young people waved flags and pictures of the populist nationalis­t cleric Sadr while fireworks fired off into the night sky.

Zeid al-Zamili, 33, described the vote as ‘a victory over the corrupt’ and a ‘new chapter for the Iraqi people’.

“We’re done with corruption and the corrupt, we’ve suffered for years, now everything will change,” added another supporter in a black t- shirt.

Both Sadr and the leader of the ex- combatant Conquest Alliance, Hadi al- Ameri, have pitched themselves as looking to sweep clean Iraqi politics.

They are both long-time political veterans well known to Iraqis.

Sadr is also well known to Washington. In the years after 2003 invasion of Iraq, Sadr and the militia he controlled became a major thorn in the side of US military, waging a brutal and costly insurgency against coalition troops.

The low turnout and apparent strong showing for the more antiestabl­ishment blocs showed that many Iraqis are fed up with the political elite that has dominated the country since the US- led invasion.

Across the war- scarred nation people railed against the same old faces who they accuse of corruption and sectariani­sm.

Turnout was low despite a sharp decrease in violence across the country, with threats from IS against the polls failing to materialis­e.

“We don’t have any faith,” said Naufel Nafea, 24, who is unemployed despite earning a degree in engineerin­g and did not vote.

The vote came with tensions surging between the United States and Iran after Washington’s withdrawa l from t he 2 015 nuclear deal, sparking fears of a destabilis­ing power struggle over Iraq.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, whose country stil l has troops in Iraq from the fight with IS, on Saturday lauded the poll and called for an “inclusive government, responsive to the needs of all Iraqis”.

Whoever emerges as premier will face the mammoth task of rebuilding a country left shattered by the battle against IS — with donors already pledging US$ 30 billion ( 25 billion euros).

Over two million people remain internally displaced across the country and IS — while weakened — still has the capability to launch deadly attacks.

The US-led coalition that helped battle IS pledged Sunday to work with the elected government to ensure the ‘ lasting defeat’ of IS and said the poll proved Iraqis ‘ emphatical­ly rejected violent extremism’.

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 ??  ?? Iraqi supporters of Sairun list celebrate after results of Iraq’s parliament­ary election were announced in Baghdad. — Reuters photo
Iraqi supporters of Sairun list celebrate after results of Iraq’s parliament­ary election were announced in Baghdad. — Reuters photo

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