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Iraq: Parliamentary elections draw low turnout amid boycott

Iraq: Parliamentary elections draw low turnout amid boycott
Iraq: Parliamentary elections draw low turnout amid boycott

2021-10-11 00:00:00 - From: Iraq News


Few Iraqis took to the polls on Sunday, as the country held its first parliamentary elections since a mass youth-led protest movement took the nation by storm in 2019.

The elections, which took place amid a widespread election boycott by anti-government activists, didn't generate much enthusiasm among Iraq's young population.

Only 41% of eligible voters cast their ballots, Iraq's electoral commission said Sunday night. The lowest turnout, somewhere between 31% and 34%, was in Baghdad, Iraq's capital.

The full election results will be released within the next 24 hours.

Low participation reflects dwindling trust in political leaders

After polls closed at 6 p.m. local time (1500 GMT) — following some 11 hours of voting — Iraq's Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi took to Twitter to celebrate the elections' alleged success.

"We have succeeded in fulfilling our promise and our duty in securing fair elections," Al-Kadhimi wrote.

The comments drew scrutiny from critics, who said the low turnout reflected voters' lack of confidence in the current government's willingness to hold fair elections.

Out of Iraq's 40 million population, some 24.9 million were eligible to vote.

Only 41% of them voted, marking a record-low turnout — falling slightly lower than the 2018 elections, which recorded a turnout of 44.5%.

Few expect change as a result of the elections

A local elections monitor recorded violations like breaches of voting secrecy, and said a whopping 41% of voters it observed were not asked to show official documentation.

Journalists also eyed the elections with skepticism, after Baghdad's election authorities restricted media access only to several designated polling stations.

The vote will decide who gets to sit in the 329-seat legislature.

Under Iraq's laws, the winner of Sunday's vote gets to choose the country's next premier tasked with forming a government. But negotiations for a premier are expected to drag on for longer. 

The vote is being held under a new electoral law that aims to improve the chances of political independents winning seats.

Despite talk of reforms, many activists have called for a boycott after authorities carried out a bloody crackdown — as well as a string of targeted assassinations —  that saw over 600 people killed and thousands more injured in the span of a few months.

While Iraq is in desperate need of change to tackle security and economic challenges, few of the nation's largely young population expect it to happen as a result of the elections.

  • An enduring conflict — 40 years since start of Iran-Iraq war

    A territorial dispute

    On September 22, 1980, Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein sent troops into neighboring Iran, starting an eight-year-long deadly war that killed thousands of people. The conflict started with a territorial dispute between the two Shiite majority countries.

  • An enduring conflict — 40 years since start of Iran-Iraq war

    The Algiers accord

    Five years earlier, in March 1975, Hussein, then Iraq's vice president, and the Shah of Iran signed a deal in Algiers to settle the border dispute. Baghdad, however, accused Tehran of plotting attacks and called for the evacuation of three strategic islands in the Strait of Hormuz, claimed by both Iran and the UAE.

  • An enduring conflict — 40 years since start of Iran-Iraq war

    A key water source

    On September 17, 1980, Baghdad declared the Algiers accord null and void and demanded control of all of the Shatt al-Arab — a 200-kilometer-long (125 mile) river formed by the meeting of the Tigris and the Euphrates, which flows into the Gulf.

  • An enduring conflict — 40 years since start of Iran-Iraq war

    Bombing of ports and cities

    Hussein's forces bombed Iranian airports, including the one in Tehran, as well as military facilities and Iran's oil refineries. Iraqi forces met little resistance in the first week and seized the towns of Qasr-e Shirin and Mehran, as well as Iran's southwestern port of Khorramshahr, where the Shatt al-Arab meets the sea.

  • An enduring conflict — 40 years since start of Iran-Iraq war

    Common enemy

    Many Gulf countries, including Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, backed Baghdad in the war against Iran, fearing that the Islamic Revolution spearheaded by Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini could influence the Shiite population in the Middle East. Western countries, too, supported Baghdad and sold weapons to Hussein's regime.

  • An enduring conflict — 40 years since start of Iran-Iraq war

    Iran pushes back

    Iran's counterattack took Iraq by surprise as Tehran managed to take back the control of the Khorramshahr port. Baghdad announced a ceasefire and pulled back troops, but Tehran rejected it and continued to bomb Iraqi cities. From April 1984, the two sides engaged in a "war of the cities," in which some 30 cities on both sides were battered by missile attacks.

  • An enduring conflict — 40 years since start of Iran-Iraq war

    Chemical weapons

    One of the highlights of the Iran-Iraq war was Baghdad's use of chemical weapons on Iran. Tehran first made the accusation in 1984 — confirmed by the UN — and then again in 1988. In June 1987, Iraqi forces dropped poison gas canisters on the Iranian town of Sardasht. In March 1988, Iran claimed that Baghdad used chemical weapons against Iraqi citizens in the town of Halabja.

  • An enduring conflict — 40 years since start of Iran-Iraq war

    Truce

    On July 18, 1988, Khomeini accepted a UN Security Council resolution to end the war. While the exact number of those killed in the war is not known, at least 650,000 people died during the conflict. A ceasefire was declared on August 20, 1988.

  • An enduring conflict — 40 years since start of Iran-Iraq war

    A new chapter

    The toppling of Hussein's regime by the US in 2003 ushered in a new era in the Middle East. Relations between Iraq and Iran have improved since then and the two countries increasingly cooperate economically, culturally and socially.

    Author: Shamil Shams


Muna Hussein, a 22-year-old cinematic makeup artist, told AP news agency she boycotted the election over security concerns, adding that she did not feel safe being around "uncontrolled weapons everywhere," a reference to militias backed by neighboring Iran.

"In my opinion, it isn't easy to hold free and fair elections under the current circumstances,'' she said.

Iraq's messy political landscape

The elections, held amid tight security, saw over 250,000 security personnel deployed to secure over 8,500 polling stations spread across the country.

Groups drawn from Iraq's majority Shiite Muslims dominate the electoral landscape, with a tight race expected between populist cleric Moqtada al-Sadr's list and the Fatah Alliance led by paramilitary leader Hadi al-Ameri.

The Fatah Alliance is comprised of parties affiliated with mostly pro-Iran Shiite militias that rose to prominence during the war against the Sunni self-proclaimed Islamic State (Daesh) terror group.

Al-Sadr is also close to Iran, but publicly rejects its political influence over Iraq. 

The elections are the country's second after defeating the Islamic State.

go/sri (AP, AFP, Reuters)