The Federal Court has postponed consideration of the lawsuit submitted by the head of the Al-Fateh Alliance Hadi Al-Amiri to cancel the election results until December 13, at a time when the sit-ins of supporters of the parties objecting to the results of the legislative elections continue in the vicinity of the Green Zone (central Baghdad).

A spokesman for the Al-Fateh Alliance, Ahmed Al-Asadi, said - in a statement - that "the Federal Supreme Court today examined several lawsuits regarding the results and the election law," noting that "the lawsuits filed for falsifying the election results were based on the report of the German examiner company."

For his part, a member of the Al-Fateh Alliance, Muhammad Al-Ghabban, said that "the Federal Court will use experts to follow up on the details of the report of the German examiner company regarding the electoral process."


Al-Amiri had confirmed yesterday, Saturday, that his alliance is continuing to challenge the elections to the Federal Court, and accused the Electoral Commission that it did not adhere to its procedures and committed a number of violations, and the first of these violations was violating its law by announcing results that represent only 79% of the results, stressing that the Al-Fateh alliance has doubts about the security apparatus. The election.

Al-Amiri’s statements come days after his meeting within what is known as the coordinating framework of the Shiite forces rejecting the election results, the leader of the Sadrist bloc Muqtada al-Sadr, a meeting that resulted in an agreement to continue discussion and debate within specific committees, but Al-Amiri returned and later questioned the election results.

There was no comment from the Sadrist bloc, which won first place in the early parliamentary elections, on the move taken by the Shiite coordination framework towards the judiciary to cancel the election results.

Supporters of the losing Shiite parties and alliances in the Iraqi parliamentary elections continue to refuse to recognize their results, despite their final announcement at the end of last November, and the protesters are calling for a manual recount of all electoral centers in the country.

The Sadrist bloc won 73 seats, compared to 54 in 2018, while the Al-Fateh coalition won 17 seats, recording a significant decline after it represented the second force (48 deputies) in the 2018 parliament.

In the infographic.. the final results of the Iraqi parliament elections https://t.co/dLRgnLVjwv

- Informed (@INA__NEWS) November 30, 2021