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Iraq vote

March 27, 2010

The Iraqiya party of former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi has been declared the winner of Iraq's elections in preliminary results announced Friday. Now Allawi must focus on finding coalition partners.

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Supporters of Ayad Allawi celebrate his party's victory in Baghdad
The announcement of the Iraqiya party's victory was met with celebrations by supportersImage: AP

The secular Iraqiya party of former prime minister Ayad Allawi has begun coalition-building after preliminary election results indicated it had won two more seats than that of incumbent Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. But talks could prove divisive.

Iraqiya won a total of 91 seats in the 325-seat parliament, edging out Maliki's State of Law Alliance, which won 89 seats according to preliminary results of 100 percent of the votes, issued by Iraq's election commission on Friday.

The Shiite-led Iraqi National Alliance won 70 seats, and the Kurdistania party of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region won 43 seats.

Coalition, but not necessarily consensus

But Iraqiya did not win an outright majority, so it must build a coalition from among the various religious and ethnically based parties. Allawi said he would extend his "hands and heart" to all groups.

"For all who want and wish to participate in building Iraq, we will together bury political sectarianism and political regionalism," Allawi told Iraqi television.

A woman casts her vote in Baghdad
The March 7 elections were the second in Iraq since the ouster of Saddam Hussein in 2003Image: AP

That could be easier said than done. Al-Maliki has refused to accept the results of the March 7 election, after having previously called for a manual recount in light of alleged irregularities in counting the votes.

"The election results are not final," al-Maliki told a press conference in Baghdad on Friday.

The results must be certified by an Iraqi court before they can be declared final, a process that will probably take about two weeks. Parties have three days to submit complaints to be investigated by the election commission.

Allawi is also on a timeline. He has 30 days to build a coalition including at least 163 of the parliament's seats. If he fails, Iraq's president will appoint the head of another party to try to form a government.

Electoral success

The election was judged a success by international observers, with United Nations envoy Ad Melkert hailing them as "credible." The United States offered congratulations, noting that observers had not recorded any incidents of widespread fraud.

"This marks a significant milestone in the ongoing democratic development of Iraq," said State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley.

svs/AFP/Reuters
Editor: Rick Demarest