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Maliki leads Baghdad poll count | Maliki leads Baghdad poll count |
(40 minutes later) | |
Partial results for Iraq's elections show Prime Minister Nouri Maliki's coalition ahead in the crucial area of Baghdad, election officials say. | |
Results from across the country suggest a tight contest may be developing between Mr Maliki and his main rival, Iyad Allawi. | |
Baghdad has 70 seats in the 325-member parliament, making results there key. | |
There have been complaints about the slow pace of the count for the 7 March polls, and some claims of fraud. | |
Final results for all 18 provinces are not expected for a fortnight, after which there is expected to be a long process of coalition-building. | |
Coalition likely | |
The election commission released its preliminary figures for Baghdad on Saturday, and said about 18% of the vote had been counted. | |
The results showed Mr Maliki's State of Law, a coalition which purportedly cuts across religious and tribal lines, was leading the mainly-Shia Iraqi National Alliance by some 50,000 votes. | |
Former PM Iyad Allawi's secular Iraqiya bloc was in third place. | |
On Friday, the commission said Mr Maliki's State of Law bloc was leading in two Shia provinces south of Baghdad. | On Friday, the commission said Mr Maliki's State of Law bloc was leading in two Shia provinces south of Baghdad. |
It said Mr Maliki's main rival, Iyad Allawi, was ahead in two provinces to the north of the capital. | It said Mr Maliki's main rival, Iyad Allawi, was ahead in two provinces to the north of the capital. |
About 6,200 candidates from 86 factions campaigned for seats in the 325-member parliament. | |
Analysts say it is unlikely one party will form a government alone and there may be months of negotiations on a coalition. | |
Voter turnout was 62%, officials said, despite attacks that killed 38 people on Sunday. | |
It was down on the 75% turnout figure for the 2005 general election. |