Los Angeles Times

After Iraq recount, Sadr’s bloc still leads

- By Nabih Bulos

AMMAN, Jordan — Three months after Iraq’s parliament­ary elections, the long-awaited results of a recount are in, and the faction allied with Shiite Muslim cleric Muqtada Sadr, a onceimplac­able U.S. foe turned nationalis­t leader, is still in the lead.

Sadr’s bloc, known as Sairoon, which means “marching to reform,” kept all of its 54 seats.

The Conquest Alliance, a coalition of paramilita­ry groups with varying degrees of allegiance to Iran, remained in second place but picked up one seat, bringing its total to 48. That came at the expense of a bloc led by Prime Minister Haidar Abadi. Its total fell to 42.

The results, released Friday by the Independen­t High Electoral Commission, still must be ratified by the Supreme Court. Once that is done, the the current president, Fuad Masum, will have 90 days to convene parliament to elect a new speaker, president and prime minister and then form a Cabinet.

Though Sadr remains the winner, his bloc holds too few seats to form a government on its own. That requires the backing of at least 165 members of the Council of Representa­tives — or more than half of the 329 legislator­s.

The election was held May 12. Parliament ordered the manual recount in response to concerns about the voting system, which used machines to read ballots digitally linked to each voter’s ID registrati­on card and fingerprin­t.

Many voters and political parties complained of machines breaking down and alleged wide-scale fraud, especially in the multiethni­c city of Kirkuk and the Kurdish province of Sulaymaniy­a.

The results remained the same in 13 of the country’s 18 provinces.

Also unchanged was voter turnout, which remained at 44.5%, the lowest participat­ion since the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.

The dismal participat­ion was widely viewed as a mass rejection of the country’s almost comically corrupt political class, which, despite Iraq’s oil riches, has not been able to provide reliable services for the last 15 years.

The lack of electricit­y, chronic water shortages and high unemployme­nt were particular­ly galling in the southern city of Basra, which supplies most of Iraq’s oil but according to its residents enjoys none of its privileges.

With temperatur­es reaching as high as 120 degrees, residents there took to the streets last month, sparking a wave of protests that have spread to major cities, including the capital, Baghdad.

The demonstrat­ions have been damaging for Abadi. Though his bloc finished in third place, he has been trying to amass support for a unity government that would keep him in office for a second term.

Abadi dismissed the electricit­y minister last month, and this week he sacked four directors from the ministry. Still, protests continued Friday.

Sadr, meanwhile, released a list of 40 demands that he said would counter the “deep state” that sought to reassert the “hegemony of corrupt political forces” by barring officials previously in power from the government. Legislator­s with dual nationalit­y would also be blocked from taking office.

If his demands were not met, he said, he would take the course of “political opposition and constructi­ve populism,” insisting he would “safeguard protesters.”

nabih.bulos @latimes.com Twitter: @nabihbulos

 ?? Hadi Mizban Associated Press ?? SHIITE MUSLIM cleric Muqtada Sadr’s bloc still holds 54 seats in parliament after a manual recount.
Hadi Mizban Associated Press SHIITE MUSLIM cleric Muqtada Sadr’s bloc still holds 54 seats in parliament after a manual recount.

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