Arab News

Iraqi forces prepare new push, tactics in Mosul

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to the country’s electoral committee, which is dominated by affiliates of powerful political parties.

If “the law remains... this means that we will order a boycott of the elections,” Al-Sadr said in televised remarks made at a demonstrat­ion at Baghdad’s Tahrir Square.

The cleric did not specify the specific changes he wants to take place, but the current law has been criticized as being biased toward large political parties over smaller ones.

The UN has backed demands for electoral reform, urging Parliament last month to “finalize the ongoing review” of the election law and the electoral commission.

Al-Sadr is the scion of a powerful clerical family who in earlier years raised a rebellion against US-led forces and commanded a feared militia.

He had lost some of his political influence in recent years but has brought himself back into relevance by calling for demonstrat­ions to push for reforms.

His supporters broke into Baghdad’s fortified Green Zone area, where the government is headquarte­red, on several occasions last year, and clashes at a Baghdad protest left seven people dead last month.

Demonstrat­ions calling for improved services and opposing widespread corruption broke out in the summer of 2015, drawing pledges from authoritie­s that reforms would be made that ultimately led to little in the way of lasting change.

The protest movement eventually flagged, but Al-Sadr subsequent­ly revitalize­d it by calling for his supporters to take part in demonstrat­ions starting last year.

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