Allawi edges home in Iraq election

Iraq’s secular former prime minister edged out Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki as final results of the parliamentary elections were released today.

Iraq’s secular former prime minister edged out Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki as final results of the parliamentary elections were released today.

Ayad Allawi now gets the first attempt at forming a government.

The narrow margin – 91 seats for Ayad Allawi’s coalition to 89 for al-Maliki’s alliance – sets the stage for months of political wrangling as the veterans attempt to win support for a majority coalition.

The results were based on numbers released by the election commission and compiled by The Associated Press.

Within minutes of the results being released, al-Maliki appeared on a nationally-televised news conference and announced he would not accept the results.

Shia-backed Al-Maliki, who appeared with his supporters lined up behind him, said he would challenge the results through legal process.

The vote totals were released just hours after a twin bombing near a restaurant in a city north of Baghdad killed at least 40 people, highlighting the violence many Iraqis fear could mar the post-election process as both sides scramble to forge enough alliances to assemble a governing coalition.

The top official for the United Nations in Iraq, Ad Melkert, said the UN believed the country’s March 7 parliamentary elections were credible and called on all sides to accept the results.

That thought was echoed by US Ambassador Christopher Hill and General Ray Odierno, the top US military official in Iraq, who praised what they described as a “historic electoral process,” and said they supported the finding of election observers who said there was no evidence of widespread or serious fraud.

Al-Maliki and his supporters in the State of Law coalition have previously called for a recount amid claims of vote rigging and fraud, but election officials refused.

The prime minister, who is fighting for a second four-year term, has widespread support from Iraq’s Shiite majority but has tried to distance himself from his sectarian roots and portray himself as a nationalist who helped return stability to Iraq after years of violence.

But his support for a ban of hundreds of candidates with alleged ties to Saddam Hussein’s regime severely undercut any support he had from Sunnis, who felt the ban unfairly targeted their candidates.

Many Sunnis instead threw their weight behind Allawi, a secular Shiite who has built a broad coalition drawn from both Islamic sects. Allawi, who served as prime minister from 2004 to 2005, has used his anti-Iran rhetoric to appeal to Sunnis who are wary of Tehran’s influence with their Shiite-majority government.

The tight race has set the stage for protracted political wrangling over forming a new government that could spark new fighting and complicate American efforts to speed up troop withdrawals in the coming months.

Friday’s blasts underscored the security risks that remain in Iraq. The two bombs exploded near a popular restaurant in Khalis, a town 50 miles north of Baghdad, injuring dozens of people.

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