Iraq PM calls for vote recount as rival takes lead

By DPA,

Baghdad: Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki Sunday called for a recount of votes cast in the country’s March 7 parliamentary polls after early results showed his main rival pulling ahead.


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The Iraqi parliamentary race looked set to go down to the wire after early results announced late Saturday showed former prime minister Ayad Allawi’s Iraqi List eking out a narrow lead over al-Maliki’s State of Law coalition.

Al-Maliki Sunday called on the Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC) to conduct a manual recount of the national vote, given allegations of fraud.

This would “preserve political stability … and avoid a return to violence”, he said in a statement.

The electoral commission stood by the early results, saying there was no need for a recount.

“The commission has handed over copies of the results from the polling stations to all political entities,” the Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC)’s Faraj al-Haidari said in a statement broadcast on Iraqi state television.

“They should review these results and compare them to those announced by the commission before asking for a recount,” he said.

The commission is prepared for “a recount from any polling station with results that are different from those handed over to the political groups”, he said.

Abbas al-Bayati, a senior lawmaker running for re-election with al-Maliki’s coalition, defended the prime minister’s call for a recount.

“The call for a recount is legitimate and constitutional,” he told DPA. “There are signs of a bug in the entering of (vote) data.”

“Al-Maliki … is calling for transparency. There are a number of entities with concerns,” Al-Bayati said. “The commission should respond to reassure these entities and settle the matter with transparency and trust.”

The IHEC’s Qassim al-Aboudi noted that the commission had cancelled the results of five stations in Baghdad, Mosul and al-Anbar because of fraud.

He said the commission is still investigating 1,979 complaints, including 319 so-called “red-category”, or most serious, complaints.

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