Baltimore Sun

Iraq warehouse fire deals setback to election process

- By Tamer El-Ghobashy and Mustafa Salim

BAGHDAD — A fire engulfed a depot Sunday where ballots from Iraq’s national elections were being stored ahead of a full manual recount, the latest setback for a process that had already been mired in accusation­s of fraud and other violations.

The blaze sent black plumes that could be seen for miles around the capital. There were fears that the destructio­n of ballots further risks the legitimacy of last month’s election, which saw a major shift in Iraq’s political order.

Saad Maan, a spokesman for Iraq’s interior ministry, said the fire had broken out in a warehouse where electronic voting machines and some ballot boxes were stored. He said it was one of four storage facilities for ballots on the site, belonging to Iraq’s ministry of trade, and that the three depots with the majority of returns had been spared.

The cause of the fire is unknown, he said, and would be investigat­ed once the blaze was contained by the nine teams of firefighte­rs at the scene in the Rasafa district of Baghdad.

The warehouses contained ballots from the largest voting district in the capital.

It was not immediatel­y clear how the damage would affect the results of the election, which have been called into question amid persistent claims of significan­t irregulari­ties and mismanagem­ent.

Salim al-Jubouri, the outgoing speaker of parliament, who lost his seat in the election, called for a re-do of the vote because of the fire.

The fire broke out on the same day a panel of judges had been formed to officially take over the election The building that contained ballots from Baghdad’s largest voting district burns on Sunday ahead of a recount. recount from the ostensibly autonomous Independen­t High Electoral Commission, the body that administer­ed the vote and had since come under criticism for its performanc­e.

Last week, Iraq’s parliament voted to dismiss the commission­ers and replace them with judges while calling for a full hand recount of the approximat­ely 11 million votes. Some parties condemned the measure, saying it was spearheade­d by groups of lawmakers who had lost their seats.

A ticket backed by the Shiite cleric Moqtada alSadr, a long-time opponent of American influence in Iraq, won the most seats in the initial count, with 54 out of 329 — placing him in prime position to select the nation’s next leader. A coalition of figures from influentia­l Shiite militias placed second with 47 seats.

Iraq’s prime minister, Haider al-Abadi, whose ticket had placed third in the May 12 election, approved the move for the recount by the lawmakers saying the election commission was to blame for what he described as widespread irregulari­ties.

Before the parliament had acted the electoral commission said it was voiding 1,021 ballot boxes from around the country, along with votes cast by Iraqis abroad and Iraqis still living in displaceme­nt camps that were set up during the battles against Islamic State.

The commission did not say why it was nullifying those votes or detail any discrepanc­ies, fueling suspicion by voters and political parties over its administra­tion of the tightly contested election. Ahead of Sunday’s fire, the recount was not expected to significan­tly alter the final results of the elections.

 ?? HADI MIZBAN/AP ??
HADI MIZBAN/AP

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