Times of Oman

Iraqi parliament fails to approve election date

-

BAGHDAD: Iraq’s parliament failed on Saturday to approve May 12 as the election date, as suggested by the government, as minority sect and Kurdish lawmakers demanded a delay to allow hundreds of thousands of war-displaced people to return home.

Majority sect politician­s, including Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi, insist on holding the election as planned on May 12, saying a delay would be against the constituti­on.

Speaking after Saturday’s session in Baghdad, Parliament­ary Speaker Salim Al Jabouri, a member of the minority sect, expressed hope that parliament would be able to vote on an election date by Monday, state TV reported.

Surge in popularity

Abadi is seeking re-election, building on a surge in his popularity among Iraq’s majority community after leading the three-year fight against IS militants, supported by a US-led coalition.

“Postponing the elections would set a dangerous precedent, underminin­g the constituti­on and damaging Iraq’s long-term democratic developmen­t,” the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad said in a statement on Thursday.

Washington had shown understand­ing for Abadi’s move in October to dislodge Kurdish fighters from the oil rich northern region of Kirkuk, even though the Kurds are traditiona­l allies of the United States. Tens of thousands of Kurds were displaced as a result of the takeover of the ethnically mixed areas of Kirkuk and its surroundin­gs by Iraqi forces supported by Iranian-backed paramilita­ry groups.

The United Nations estimates the total number of people who remain displaced in Iraq at 2.6 million, mostly from areas previously controlled by IS.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman