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Sunday, September 16, 2018, 17:36
Iraq parliament elects Sunni lawmaker al-Halbousi as speaker
By Reuters
Sunday, September 16, 2018, 17:36 By Reuters

This handout video grab taken from live footage released by the Iraqi Parliament on Sept 15, 2018 shows newly-elected parliament speaker Mohamed Al-Halbusi addressing the chamber in the capital Baghdad. (IRAQI PARLIAMENT / AFP)

ERBIL/SULAIMANIYA – Iraq's parliament elected Sunni lawmaker Mohammed al-Halbousi as speaker on Saturday, marking an important step towards establishing a new government four months after an inconclusive national election.

Mohammed al-Halbousi's election marks the start of a 90-day process outlined in the constitution, designed to eventually lead to a new government

Parliament had been due to elect a speaker and two deputies during its first meeting on Sept 3, but failed to do so as lawmakers were unable to determine which competing bloc had the most seats.

Hassan al-Kaabi, who ran on Moqtada al-Sadr's Saeroon list which came first in May's national election, was elected as Halbousi's first deputy. The vote for a second deputy was inconclusive and will be put to a second round on Sunday.

Halbousi's election marks the start of a 90-day process outlined in the constitution, designed to eventually lead to a new government.

READ MORE: Iraq's new parliament meets as rival blocs vie for majority

Lawmakers must next elect a new president and task the leader of the largest bloc to form a government as prime minister. But a dominant bloc has yet to emerge, against a backdrop of shifting political alliances.

Halbousi defeated former Defense Minister Khaled al-Obeidi, winning the position with 169 votes, according to Shi'ite lawmaker Husham al-Suhail. Iraq's parliament contains 329 seats.

Announcing the vote, the temporary leader of the assembly said Halbousi, 37, had become the youngest speaker of parliament in Iraq's history.

ALSO READ: Iraqi court endorses manual recount for May election

Before running in May's national election as a candidate on the Anbar Our Identity electoral list, Halbousi was the governor of Anbar province. He had previously served in Iraq's parliament, from 2014 to 2017.

Since Saddam Hussein was toppled in a 2003 US-led invasion, power has been shared among Iraq's three largest ethnic-sectarian components. The prime minister has traditionally been a Shi'ite Arab, the speaker of parliament a Sunni Arab and the president a Kurd.

Iraqis voted in May in their first parliamentary election since the defeat of Islamic State’s self-declared caliphate, but a contentious recount process delayed the announcement of final results until last month.

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