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Iraq's nearly year-long political stalemate Baghdad, Aug 29 (AFP) Aug 29, 2022 Iraq was in chaos Monday after powerful Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr said he was quitting politics and his supporters stormed the government palace in Baghdad's fortified Green Zone. Here is a timeline of the main developments since elections in October last year, as rival Shiite factions jostle for power and political deadlock leaves Iraq without a new government, prime minister or head of state.
Sadr's political movement, which was already the biggest in parliament and campaigned on a nationalist, anti-corruption agenda, increases its seat tally according to preliminary results, in an vote marred by low turnout. His rivals in the pro-Iranian Fatah alliance, representing the former paramilitary alliance Hashed al-Shaabi (Popular Mobilisation Forces), suffer sharp losses. They reject the results, calling them a "scam".
Hashed supporters stage a sit-in at one of the entrances to Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, home to government buildings and foreign embassies. On November 5, one demonstrator is shot dead in clashes between security forces and several hundred supporters of pro-Iranian groups. On the night of November 6, outgoing Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhemi escapes unharmed after an assassination attempt at his Green Zone residence, which is attacked by an explosives-packed drone. No group claims responsibility for the attack.
The main Shiite parties traditionally form a coalition, irrespective of how many parliamentary seats each has won. Instead, Sadr infuriates his Shiite rivals by insisting on trying to form a "majority government" with his movement's Sunni Muslim and Kurdish allies.
The parliamentary vote is boycotted by the pro-Iran Coordination Framework, which draws together the Fatah alliance and lawmakers from the party of Sadr's longtime foe, ex-prime minister Nuri al-Maliki.
The largely ceremonial role conventionally goes to a member of Iraq's Kurdish minority. The president's election is usually the first step in the formation of a new administration, before the designation of a prime minister and the creation of a new government.
Their seats go to the candidates who arrived in second place. On June 23, 64 new MPs are sworn in, making the pro-Iran bloc the biggest in parliament.
Three days later, they return in their thousands and again breach the Green Zone and storm parliament, this time vowing to stay "until further notice". They later move their protest to outside the building. On August 12, supporters of the Coordination Framework begin their own sit-in near the Green Zone, calling for the swift formation of a new government.
Ten days later, he proposes "all parties" including his own should give up government positions in order to help resolve the crisis. On Monday, he announces on Twitter his "definitive retirement" from politics, adding that "all the institutions" linked to his Sadrist movement will be closed.
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