Khaleej Times

Results confirm Sadr lead

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Populist Shia cleric who opposes both the US and Iranian interferen­ce wins the most seats in Iraq elections

Your vote is an honour for us. We will not disappoint you Moqtada Al Sadr

baghdad — Final results from Iraq’s election confirmed on Saturday that an alliance spearheade­d by populist cleric Moqtada Sadr has triumphed, but the fiery preacher faces a huge task to form a governing coalition.

Sadr’s Marching Towards Reform bloc won 54 of the 329 seats in parliament in a major upset at a May 12 vote that saw a record level of abstention­s as Iraqis turned their back on a widely reviled elite.

The nationalis­t — whose Shia militia battled US troops after the 2003 invasion — faces a deeply fragmented political landscape and opposition from key player Iran after he called for foreign influence in Iraq to be cut.

Sadr, who has reinvented himself as an anti-corruption crusader in an alliance with secular leftists, is looking to be the kingmaker and oversee the formation of a crosssecta­rian, technocrat government from some dozen parties.

But negotiatio­ns — which tentativel­y began after the vote — look set to drag out and it remains far from certain that Sadr’s group will claim power after the first vote since the defeat of the Daesh group.

Poised in second place with some 47 seats is the pro-Iranian Conquest Alliance made up of exfighters from mainly Shia paramilita­ry units that battled Daesh.

The Victory Alliance bloc of Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi, who hoped voters would reward him for seeing off the militants, performed worse than expected and was back in third place on 42 seats.

Sadr declared on Twitter that the results showed “reform has won and corruption is weakened”, but he faces a tricky regional context as he begins coalition negotiatio­ns.

Writing in The Washington Post on Friday, premier Abadi insisted his government would do “all it can to ensure that the transition to the next government is conducted in a stable and transparen­t manner”.

He called for “dialogue” to create a new government that “must be demonstrab­ly non-elitist (and) representa­tive of the people rather than dominated by one side or denominati­on”.

Abadi — who came to power in 2014 as IS rampaged across Iraq — has balanced off rivals the US and Iran and could still remain in position as a consensus candidate.

The protracted horse-trading comes at a time of high tensions after Washington’s withdrawal from a landmark nuclear deal with Tehran and fears of a tug-of-war over Iraq.

Even before Sadr’s victory was confirmed, Iran had already been convening meetings to try to block him from forming a government.

Iran dispatched the powerful general Qassem Soleimani to Baghdad, who has met with several members of Iraq’s old guard including Abadi and his predecesso­r Nuri Al Maliki.

According to officials, Soleimani has ruled out any alliance with Sadr, who surprised many last year by visiting Iran’s regional foe Saudi Arabia as Riyadh seeks increased involvemen­t in Iraq.

Soleimani’s shuttle diplomacy is aimed at gathering enough parties opposed to Sadr to deny his alliance a governable majority and a route to the powerful position of prime minister — though Sadr himself says he is not in the running for the top job. — AFP

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 ?? AP file ?? Muqtada Al Sadr. —
AP file Muqtada Al Sadr. —

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