Oman Daily Observer

Disenchant­ed Iraq voters say fed up with ‘same old faces’

-

BAGHDAD: Only a decade after their country’s first ever multi-party elections, disenchant­ed Iraqis say “the same old faces” with their vested interests have been running the show since the fall of Saddam Hussein.

“How long have Ibrahim al Jaafari, Ayad Allawi, Nuri al Maliki or Haider al Abadi been in power? One minute as MPS, the next as ministers,” said Midan al Hamadani, listing Iraq’s foreign minister, vice-president, exprime minister and current premier.

“The parties are always the same and the same people come back to power, whether we like it or not,” said the 40-year-old Baghdad resident.

Widespread corruption combined with failings in basic services such as water, electricit­y and transporta­tion have reinforced the public’s lack of faith in Iraq’s political leaders.

In a country with a long history of conflict and intercommu­nal violence, more than 24 million Iraqis are registered to elect 320 deputies from a field of around 7,000 candidates on May 12, with 71 seats reserved for the capital.

Baghdad has been inundated with election posters plastered on apartment buildings and even trees.

In some places, candidates’ faces have overshadow­ed posters of the “martyrs” killed in the 2014-2017 defeat of the IS group in northern and western Iraq.

“It’s the same old faces! All they care about is getting rich, not serving the people!” said an angry Haidar al Shamri, 35, letting rip in a street in central Baghdad.

Since the Us-led invasion of 2003 that toppled Saddam, the same political figures and parties have held the levers of power in Iraq.

“So what change has there been? At least if we had a change of faces. We’re fed up with lies,” was the outspoken opinion of Umm Yussef, a 54-yearold woman from the northern city of Mosul.

Her northern city, Iraq’s second largest, was devastated in a ferocious battle to oust IS from its bastion and reconstruc­tion has been stalled by a lack of state funding.

Rumour has it that the marjaiya, the highest religious authority of Iraq’s majority, has called for incumbents not to be re-elected. Contacted by AFP, it gave no confirmati­on.

According to the commission, 20 per cent candidates are newcomers.

One such new face is Hala Karim, a health ministry employee, for whom “nothing has changed in 15 years (since Saddam’s fall), if anything things have gone from bad to worse”.

“In this cradle of civilisati­on, confession­alism is on the rise and electoral of the the situation is deteriorat­ing. We must change that,” said the woman in her 30s running on an independen­t list, Tahalouf Baghdad (Baghdad Coalition).

The old guard were even resorting to posting defamatory videos online of newcomers to knock them out of contention. “The big sharks can only think of defaming us to stay in power,” she said.

Haidar al Bizani, who is also running, learnt the hard way: he sold a plot of land and quit his job, all to no avail, as he failed to win a seat as an independen­t at Iraq’s last election.

“There is no way an independen­t candidate can win. The law is to the disadvanta­ge of small lists. That’s why I’m running this time on the Hikma list,” led by politician Ammar al Hakim, he said.

 ?? — AFP ?? This picture shows electoral posters in Ramadi ahead of the parliament­ary elections to be held on May 12.
— AFP This picture shows electoral posters in Ramadi ahead of the parliament­ary elections to be held on May 12.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman