Iraqi forces, displaced people vote early ahead of election

Iraqi forces, displaced people vote early ahead of election
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Updated 1 min 28 sec ago

Iraqi forces, displaced people vote early ahead of election

Iraqi forces, displaced people vote early ahead of election

BAGHDAD: Members of Iraq’s security forces and its internally displaced population headed to the polls in early voting on Sunday ahead of upcoming parliamentary elections.
Polls opened at 0400 GMT for members of the armed forces, who account for 1.3 million of the more than 21 million eligible voters and would be deployed for security purposes on election day, according to the state Iraqi News Agency.
More than 26,500 internally displaced people are also eligible for early voting.
The November 11 elections will be the sixth since the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq that toppled Sunni dictator Saddam Hussein.
More than 7,740 candidates, nearly a third of them women, are running for the 329-seat parliament.
An old electoral law, which parliament revived in 2023, will apply to the elections, with many seeing it as favoring larger parties.
While around 70 independents won seats in the 2021 election, only 75 independents are contesting in the upcoming ballot.
Observers fear that turnout might dip below the 41-percent record low of 2021, reflecting voters’ apathy and skepticism in a country marked by entrenched leadership, mismanagement, and endemic corruption.
Influential Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr has urged his followers to boycott what he described as a “flawed election.”
Since the US-led invasion, Iraq’s once-oppressed Shiite majority has dominated politics.
Influenctial Shiite figures including former Prime Minister Nuri Al-Maliki and cleric Ammar Al-Hakim will play a central role in the election, as well as several pro-Iran armed groups.
Current Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani, elected in 2022 backed by pro-Iranian parties, is seeking a second term and is expected to secure a sizeable bloc.
By convention in post-invasion Iraq, a Shiite Muslim holds the powerful post of prime minister and a Sunni that of parliament speaker, while the largely ceremonial presidency goes to a Kurd.
The next prime minister will be voted in by whichever coalition can negotiate allies to become the biggest parliamentary bloc.


Syrian president arrives in US for landmark visit

Syrian president arrives in US for landmark visit
Updated 5 sec ago

Syrian president arrives in US for landmark visit

Syrian president arrives in US for landmark visit
  • President Ahmed Al-Sharaa due to meet US President Donald Trump at the White House on Monday
  • Sharaa’s Washington trip comes after his landmark visit to the UN in September, his first time on US soil
WASHINGTON: Syria’s President Ahmed Al-Sharaa arrived in the United States on Saturday for a landmark official visit, his country’s state news agency reported, a day after Washington removed him from a terrorism blacklist.
Sharaa, whose forces ousted longtime ruler Bashar Assad late last year, is due to meet US President Donald Trump at the White House on Monday.
It’s the first such visit by a Syrian president since the country’s independence in 1946, according to analysts.
The interim leader met Trump for the first time in Riyadh during the US president’s regional tour in May.
US envoy to Syria Tom Barrack said earlier this month that Sharaa would “hopefully” sign an agreement to join the international US-led alliance against the Daesh group.
The United States plans to establish a military base near Damascus “to coordinate humanitarian aid and observe developments between Syria and Israel,” a diplomatic source in Syria said.
The State Department’s decision Friday to remove Sharaa from the blacklist was widely expected.
State Department spokesman Tommy Pigott said Sharaa’s government had been meeting US demands including on working to find missing Americans and on eliminating any remaining chemical weapons.
“These actions are being taken in recognition of the progress demonstrated by the Syrian leadership after the departure of Bashar Assad and more than 50 years of repression under the Assad regime,” Pigott said.
The spokesman added that the US delisting would promote “regional security and stability as well as an inclusive, Syrian-led and Syrian-owned political process.”
The Syrian interior ministry announced on Saturday that it had carried out 61 raids and made 71 arrests in a “proactive campaign to neutralize the threat” of Daesh, according to the official SANA news agency.
It said the raids targeted locations where Daesh sleeper cells remain, including Aleppo, Idlib, Hama, Homs, Deir ez-Zor, Raqqa, Damascus.
After his arrival in the United States, Sharaa shared a video on social media of him playing basketball with CENTCOM commander Brad Cooper and Kevin Lambert, the head of the international anti-Daesh operation in Iraq, alongside the caption “work hard, play harder.”
Transformation
Sharaa’s Washington trip comes after his landmark visit to the United Nations in September – his first time on US soil – where the ex-militant became the first Syrian president in decades to address the UN General Assembly in New York.
On Thursday, Washington led a vote by the Security Council to remove UN sanctions against him.
Formerly affiliated with Al-Qaeda, Sharaa’s group, Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS), was delisted as a terrorist group by Washington as recently as July.
Since taking power, Syria’s new leaders have sought to break from their violent past and present a moderate image more tolerable to ordinary Syrians and foreign powers.
The White House visit “is further testament to the US commitment to the new Syria and a hugely symbolic moment for the country’s new leader, who thus marks another step in his astonishing transformation from militant leader to global statesman,” International Crisis Group US program director Michael Hanna said.
Sharaa is expected to seek funds for Syria, which faces significant challenges in rebuilding after 13 years of brutal civil war.
In October, the World Bank put a “conservative best estimate” of the cost of rebuilding Syria at $216 billion.