Iraq early election results 'tight'
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Middle East
Partial vote results in Iraq's historic election released on Thursday show a tight contest between the nation's prime minister, who had the lead in two provinces in the mainly Shi'ite south, and a secular challenger who appeared to be drawing on Sunni support north of Baghdad.
The preliminary tallies from five of Iraq's 18 provinces were a setback to hard-line religious Shi'ite political leaders who have close ties to Iran. But results for the big prize - Baghdad - have yet to be released.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's bloc was ahead with over a third of the votes counted in the mainly Shi'ite provinces of Babil and Najaf where his rival Shi'ite religious coalition had hoped to make gains.
The Iraqiya list, which is led by former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, a secular Shi'ite, took the lead in the former Sunni insurgent strongholds of Diyala and Salahuddin.
Results from a fifth province, Irbil, were also released showing the Kurdish Alliance, which joins the two main Kurdish parties, beating out the upstart Kurdish party, Gorran, in the self-rule territory.
At stake is the right to guide Iraq's shaky stability as US troops prepare to go home.
The partial results from the Independent High Electoral Commission were released in a chaotic monitoring room in Baghdad and tallies from the rest of the nation were likely to be released over the coming days.
No bloc was expected to gain an outright majority, meaning that those who do well will have to negotiate to form alliances and choose a prime minister.
In an effort to cast himself as an inclusive leader for all Iraqis, al-Maliki quit the main Shi'ite coalition last year to create the State of Law alliance, which includes some Sunni groups.
In Babil province, al-Maliki's political bloc won about 42 percent of the estimated 160,870 votes that have been counted so far, according to the data released by the election commission.
In neighbouring Najaf province, al-Maliki's win was even stronger - about 47 percent of the ballot count of 116,600 votes.
"These results were expected and it reflects the size of support with our list," said State of Law candidate Sadiq al-Laban in Najaf. "We extend our hands to any bloc that wants to work for a better Iraq."
But al-Maliki appeared to be lagging far behind Allawi's list in the central provinces of Salahuddin, which is mostly Sunni, and Diyala, which has a mixed population of Sunnis, Shi'ites and Turkomen.
With only 17 percent of the ballots counted - far below the 30 percent threshhold that election officials had said would be the standard for releasing results - Iraqiya had about 55 percent of the vote in Diyala and 60 percent in Salahuddin.
At the election headquarters in Baghdad, scores of journalists jostled for a view of the vote counts as they were posted on big-screen TVs.
Election officials appeared overwhelmed by the task of counting and reporting the vote, and seemed to have underestimated how long it would take.
The election commission did not post the results on a website or make them otherwise accessible to the public, although the state-run TV channel reported the tallies on Thursday evening.
Election officials said they had received about 1000 complaints about the election process so far, although gave no indication as to what the complaints were about.
The Iraqi National Alliance, which is Iraq's top Shi'ite religious coalition, came in second in both of the southern provinces. The INA is made up of two main political parties - the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council and the political party led by anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
A win in Babil and Najaf provinces would represent an improvement for al-Maliki's coalition over last year's provincial election.
The election news came as al-Maliki's office Thursday announced that the prime minister underwent surgery the day before for what an aide described Thursday as a "simple" procedure. The prime minister has already been released from the hospital and is back at work, the statement said.
- AP
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