Militias dominate electoral scene in Iraq: Results already known
Militias have dominated the
electoral scene in Iraq to a large extent, as most of the political blocs
represent fronts for terrorist factions backed by Tehran.
More than 25 million Iraqis are
entitled to vote in the Iraqi parliamentary elections, but the participation of
Iraqis in the elections was very weak, which reflects the great response to
boycott calls.
The authorities announced the
completion of the elections with “success and smoothness,” and Iraqi Prime
Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi announced on Sunday evening, October 10, the
completion of the early parliamentary elections in Iraq and fulfilling his
promise regarding them.
Kadhimi tweeted, “We have fulfilled
our duty and promised to hold fair and secure elections, and we have provided
the capabilities to make them a success.”
“I thank our honorable people. I
thank all the voters, candidates, political forces, observers, workers in the
Electoral Commission, the heroic security forces that provided security, the
United Nations and the rational religious authority,” he added.
But behind this scene, feelings of
despair and frustration afflicted most Iraqi people due to the recycling of the
same old faces, which they got tired of and accused them of corruption and
failure and held them responsible for the situation in the country. The people
suffer from hardship due to the collapse of the security and economic
conditions and the administrative corruption, which prompted citizens to
protest since 2019 against the dominance of militia leaders, during which about
600 protesters were killed and thousands wounded, as well as those who were
kidnapped and tortured, until the government of former Prime Minister Adel
Abdul Mahdi collapsed and Kadhimi came to pave the way for early elections to
bring a government that meets the aspirations of the protesters, which did not
manifest. The revolutionaries decided to boycott, and a number of large
political blocs decided to withdraw from the electoral race, such as the Iraqi
Communist Party, and the blocs led by Sunni leaders such as Iyad Allawi, Saleh
al-Mutlaq and Osama al-Nujaifi.
Holding those involved in the
killing of demonstrators accountable was at the top of the protesters’ demands,
which has not been achieved so far. Citizens saw that the elections would bring
a government from the same political class against which they had demonstrated
for many months, and thus any hope of change was dashed, so they decided to
boycott.
For his part, Iraqi political
analyst Hazem al-Obaidi said that the elections were nothing but a tragedy for
the Iraqi people, because the elections were predetermined before they were
held, and they were just a theatrical play, with the role of international
observers and others only to beautify the picture.
He added in exclusive statements to
the Reference that the vote brought about the same faces, and not the best of
the best as the propaganda claimed, adding that what actually has happened is
that Iran controls the political scene.
Obaidi added that some of the
candidates are wanted by the security forces and the judiciary, and some of
them are from the Turkish Kurdistan Workers Party, while many are wanted
internationally on terrorism-related charges, and some of them also hold
Iranian citizenship.