Populist Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr May retained his lead in the Iraqi parliamentary election, results of a nationwide recount of votes showed yesterday, positioning him to play a central role in forming the country’s next government.
The Iraqi Independent High Election Commission (IHEC) released the results of the recount on its Web site early in the day. The Iraqi Council of Representatives ordered the recount in June after widespread allegations of fraud cast doubt on the integrity of the ballot.
The omission said that the results of the recount matched the initial results from 13 of Iraq’s 18 provinces.
Photo: Reuters
The winning parties are still embroiled in negotiations over forming the next governing coalition three months after the vote, with no sign of an imminent conclusion.
The recount did not alter the initial results significantly, with al-Sadr keeping his tally of 54 seats.
A group of Iran-backed Shiite militia leaders remained second behind al-Sadr’s bloc, but gained an extra seat that pushed them to 48, with incumbent Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi’s bloc still in third place with 42 seats.
Al-Abadi, who is seeking a second term in office, is heading a fragile caretaker government until a new one is formed.
The political uncertainty over the makeup of the new government has raised tensions at a time when public impatience is growing over poor basic services, unemployment and the slow pace of rebuilding after a three-year war with the Islamic State group.
Anger is mounting with frequent protests, backed by Iraq’s top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, taking place in the Shiite southern provinces.
Al-Sadr, who also backs the protests, has issued a list of 40 conditions that he says the new prime minister has to meet, including being politically independent and not running for re-election, for his bloc to join a governing coalition and that he would go into opposition if the conditions were not met.
The manual recount has been politically contentious from the start, although it was never expected to widely alter the results.
The IHEC on Monday said that it had completed the recount, but was forced to cut the process short in the capital, Baghdad, because voting records had been destroyed by a warehouse fire two months ago.
The fire broke out hours after parliament ordered the recount and suspended the electoral commission’s leadership, replacing it with a panel of judges, after a government report concluded that there were serious violations in an initial count using an electronic vote-counting system.
The digitized system was intended to help regulate and speed up vote-counting, but critics have said that the tabulation system in electronic voting machines, which were used for the first time, were not secure enough from tampering.
The commission ignored an anti-corruption body’s warnings about the credibility of the electronic machines used in the election, a document seen by reporters showed.
The devices, provided by South Korean company Miru Systems under a deal with the IHEC, are at the heart of fraud allegations that led to the manual recount.
Concerns about the election count center on discrepancies in the tallying of votes by the voting machines, mainly in the Kurdish Sulaimaniya Governatorate and the ethnically mixed Kirkuk Governatorate, and suggestions that the devices could have been tampered with or hacked to skew the result.
However, the recount results showed no significant changes in either province.
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