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Iraqi court endorses manual recount for May national election

Denies invalidating ballots from those displaced by conflict

By PHILIP ISSA, Associated Press
Published: June 21, 2018, 10:12pm
2 Photos
Iraqi electoral officials work to salvage ballot boxes as smoke rises from a fire that broke out at Baghdad’s largest ballot box storage site, where ballots from Iraq’s May parliamentary elections are stored, in Baghdad, Iraq, June 10. On Thursday, June 21, Iraq’s Supreme Court endorsed a manual recount of all ballots from last month’s national elections, but rejected the invalidation of ballots from abroad and from voters displaced by recent conflict.
Iraqi electoral officials work to salvage ballot boxes as smoke rises from a fire that broke out at Baghdad’s largest ballot box storage site, where ballots from Iraq’s May parliamentary elections are stored, in Baghdad, Iraq, June 10. On Thursday, June 21, Iraq’s Supreme Court endorsed a manual recount of all ballots from last month’s national elections, but rejected the invalidation of ballots from abroad and from voters displaced by recent conflict. (Karim Kadim/Associated Press files) Photo Gallery

BAGHDAD — Iraq’s Supreme Court on Thursday endorsed a manual recount of all ballots from last month’s national elections, but rejected the invalidation of ballots from abroad and from voters displaced by recent conflict.

Authorities have been struggling to address allegations raised by underperforming parties that the May vote was marred by fraud.

The court ruling concerned a law passed by Parliament that mandated a full, manual recount of the vote, and ordered other measures that President Fuad Masum and the national elections commission described as political interference. Two-thirds of Parliament’s current members lost their seats in the May polls, or did not stand for re-election.

A warehouse storing ballots from eastern Baghdad was burned down days after the Parliament filed the legislation. Outgoing Parliament Speaker Salim al-Jabouri called it arson and said the fire was set to cover up fraud.

The Supreme Court said the legislation was constitutional and endorsed the order to replace the Independent Elections Commission with a panel of nine judges to supervise the recount. The commission, deflecting allegations of fraud, refused to conduct one of its own.

But the court rejected the mass invalidation of the expatriate and displaced persons vote, and the armed services vote in the country’s Kurdish governorates. Chief Justice Medhat al-Mahmoud said the sweeping measure was unjust to voters who cast legitimate ballots.

Iraqis displaced population, mostly driven from their homes during battles against the Islamic State, is presumed to be overwhelmingly Sunni, and international groups urged authorities to take measures to ensure they could vote. The perception that Sunni-majority northern Iraq was being marginalized by the Shiite-dominated government in Bagdad was seen as a key to fueling the Islamic State group’s insurgency earlier this decade.

Still, a hand recount is unlikely to dispel allegations of fraud.

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