The
Election Commission announced today that more than 800 ballot boxes have been
transported from the Ayn Al-Asad military base in Al-Baghdadi to the Baghdad
International Fair under stringent observation by the Election Commission, amid
fears expressed by the participating political parties and blocs. The fallout
from the balloting process has been in the form of claims and accusations of
fraud and forgery between the competing political entities; as of right now the Commission has announced
that it has received at least 30 complaints with regard to vote-rigging, having
allocated three days for such complaints to be submitted from the time of the
end of voting. Everybody is now awaiting the outcome of the balloting; some
sources have indicated that some of the smaller political entities which had
played a minor role in previous governments have now won the majority of
Anbar's seats, with the larger more influential blocs have had some setbacks.
The final outcome will be announced either in the governorate or in Baghdad .
The
security situation in both Ramadi and Fallujah is still difficult.
Last night,
a car-bomb was detonated in central Ramadi, following several days of the most
violent clashes to date. Some widely-dispersed but violent clashes are still underway
in the city's southern sectors; some residential districts have been hit by
both artillery and aerial bombardment, even in the districts that have enjoyed
a period of relative calm following the re-opening of their police stations.
In
Fallujah, a source at the Fallujah
General Hospital
announced that two civilians were killed and 7 were wounded as a result of
the indiscriminate shelling that has targeted a number of the city's
residential districts.
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