The Record (Troy, NY)

Record low turnout in 1st vote since IS defeat

- By Philip Issa and Qassim Abdul-Zahra

BAGHDAD » Iraq saw a record low turnout Saturday in its first elections since the collapse of the Islamic State group, pointing to widespread dissatisfa­ction with the direction of the country under Prime Minister Haidar alAbadi and presaging a long period of deal making as politician­s squabble over posts in a new government.

There were no bombings at any polling stations — a first since the U.S. invaded Iraq in 2003.

Al- Abadi called it a “historic day, spent peacefully by all Iraqis.”

Riyadh al-Badran, a member on Iraq’s national elections commission, said turnout was 44 percent. No election since 2003 saw turnout below 60 percent. More than 10 million Iraqis voted.

With no clear front-runner, it could take months for a new Parliament to form a government name a prime minister seen as suitable to the country’s rival Shiite political currents, who have adopted diverging positions on Iran.

The low turnout could open the door to Sunni-led and Kurdish electoral lists to play an outsized role in the negotiatio­ns as well. Iraq’s population is predominan­tly Shiite.

Results are expected within 48 hours, according to the electoral commission.

Despite presiding over Iraq’s war on the Islamic State group, al-Abadi was opposed by other Shiite leaders who eclipsed him in charisma and popularity. In his first term, Al-Abadi courted both U.S. and Iranian support in the war on IS.

His chief rivals were former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and Hadi al-Amiri, who heads the powerful, Iran-backed Badr Organizati­on militia, which participat­ed in the war on IS. AlAbadi was also opposed by the influentia­l cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, a staunch nationalis­t who has railed against U. S. and Iranian influence in Iraqi politics.

Iraq is beset by chronic corruption, a sputtering economy and failing public services.

“The candidates have not done anything for the people,” said Ramadan Mohsen, 50, who said he cast a blank vote in Baghdad’s distressed Sadr City slums.

Millions of others decided to abstain altogether.

“I am certain these elections are a failure,” said Abdelghani Awni, who was at a central Baghdad polling station as an observer. He did not vote. “Forget about change, from the perspectiv­e of the economy, of services — forget about it.”

Iraq’s most senior Shiite cleric spoke out on the issue of voter participat­ion Saturday afternoon, encouragin­g Iraqis to vote “to prevent the arrival of a corrupt parliament.”

“The lack of participat­ion will give the opportunit­y for others to reach parliament and they will be very far from the aspiration­s of the people,” said Sheikh AbdulMahdi al-Karbalai, the representa­tive of Grand Ayatollah Ali alSistani, on local Iraqi television from Karbala. Sistani has encouraged Iraqis to vote into power Saturday a new political class to combat corruption.

For those who did attempt to vote, some in Baghdad complained of voting irregulari­ties at polling stations linked to a new electronic voting system implemente­d for the first time this year in an effort to reduce fraud.

Thamer Aref, 45, and his wife and daughter were turned away from a polling station north of central Baghdad.

Aref had turned in his old voter ID card months ago for the biometric identifica­tion card required by the new system. However, Aref’s biometric card wasn’t ready ahead of Saturday and, with neither card, the polling station did not allow him to a cast a ballot. “I lost my right to vote,” he said.

 ?? KHALID MOHAMMED — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An Iraqi woman prepares to cast her vote Saturday in the country’s parliament­ary elections in Baghdad. For the first time since the American invasion in 2004, there were no bombings at polling places.
KHALID MOHAMMED — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An Iraqi woman prepares to cast her vote Saturday in the country’s parliament­ary elections in Baghdad. For the first time since the American invasion in 2004, there were no bombings at polling places.

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