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From snap polls to new president: Iraq's year of turmoil Baghdad, Oct 13 (AFP) Oct 13, 2022 After trying to form a new government since elections last year, Iraq on Thursday succeeded in electing a new president. Here is a timeline of 12 months of political turmoil which has periodically spilled over onto the streets.
The political movement of the powerful Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr, which was already the biggest in parliament and had campaigned on a nationalist, anti-corruption agenda, increases its tally of seats, despite a high abstention rate. His rivals in the pro-Iranian Fatah Alliance, the political arm of the former paramilitary alliance Hashed al-Shaabi (Popular Mobilisation Forces), suffer sharp losses. They reject the results as fraud.
Hashed al-Shaabi supporters stage a sit-in at an entrance 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-Iran groups. On the night of November 6, outgoing Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhemi escapes unharmed in an assassination attempt at his Green Zone residence. No group claims responsibility for the attack.
The main Shiite parties traditionally form a coalition, irrespective of how many parliamentary seats each has won. But Sadr infuriates his Shiite rivals by insisting on trying to form a "majority government" with his movement naming the prime minister with the support of Sunni Muslim and Kurdish allies. On November 30, the final election results confirm the Sadrists' victory, with the bloc winning 73 out of 329 parliamentary seats, compared with 17 for the Fatah alliance, down from 48 previously.
The 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, former prime minister Nuri al-Maliki.
The largely ceremonial role traditionally goes to a member of Iraq's Kurdish minority. The president's election usually paves the way for the designation of a prime minister and the formation of a new government.
Their seats go to the candidates who came second, making the pro-Iran bloc the biggest in parliament.
Outraged Sadr supporters breach the Green Zone on July 27 and stage a brief sit-in in parliament. Three days later, they return in their thousands and vow to stay "until further notice". On August 12, Coordination Framework supporters begin their own sit-in near the Green Zone, calling for the swift formation of a new government.
Thousands of his supporters storm the government palace inside the Green Zone. At least 30 Sadr supporters are shot dead in 24 hours in fighting with rival Shiite factions and a national curfew is decreed. They swiftly withdraw after Sadr calls on them to do so.
The election of Rashid, seen as a compromise candidate, sparks hope of an end to a year of political gridlock. His first task was nominating Sudani as prime minister, who will now attempt to form a new government. bur-eab-paj-jmy/cb/jkb
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