DAWN.COM

Today's Paper | May 05, 2024

Updated 16 May, 2018 11:54am

Sadr scores upset win in Iraq polls, eyes govt

BAGHDAD: Populist Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr on Tuesday eyed a broad coalition after appearing to deal a blow to both Iranian and American influence with a shock election triumph that has upended Iraqi politics.

Counting was still ongoing three days after the first parliamentary poll since the defeat of the Islamic State group, but the fiery Shia preacher’s grouping was in the lead with 16 of 18 provinces tallied.

Victory for the veteran nationalist’s Marching Towards Reform alliance with Iraq’s communists — pitched an anti-corruption outsider force — would be a slap in the face for Iraq’s ruling establishment.

Sadr — who has ruled himself out of becoming prime minister — looks likely to be the key powerbroker and has already mooted a technocrat government of some dozen parties that bridge sectarian divides.

But with his group set to be far from a majority in parliament, wrangling over any potential coalition should take months — and there remain major obstacles ahead that could thwart Sadr’s ambitions.

The elections on Saturday — hit by record abstentions — saw a clear rejection of the Iraqi elite that has run the country since the ouster of Saddam Hussein in 2003.

Tallies put the anti-establishment Conquest Alliance of pro-Iranian former paramilitary fighters who helped battle IS in second and incumbent Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi’s bloc back in third.

Abadi — a consensus figure favoured by the US — had been seen as likely frontrunner after declaring victory over the jihadists five months ago.

Sadr rose to prominence in the wake of the US invasion, when his militia fighters fought a bloody insurgency against American troops.

After years on the sidelines, he has now reinvented himself as a crusading champion of the poor who has linked up with secularists to battle corruption.

The protracted horse-tra­ding ahead comes as surging tensions between the US and Iran after Washington’s withdrawal from a landmark nuclear deal with Tehran, have sparked fears of a tug-of-war over Iraq.

Sadr is one of the few Iraqi politicians who is opposed to both the presence of American troops in Iraq and the influence Iran exercises over the country.

In a surprising pivot last year he visited Saudi Arabia to the south, with Riyadh looking to increase its involvement in Iraq as it vies with Tehran.

Sadr is likely to face fierce opposition from other Iraqi political forces, who may look to coalesce in a bid to stop him taking control.

Published in Dawn, May 16th, 2018

Read Comments

Pakistani lunar payload successfully launches aboard Chinese moon mission Next Story