Iraq's Sadr and communists join forces for election

Populist preacher Moqtada Sadr has defied his clerical rivals and opted to campaign for the May 12 poll alongside former enemies

Ibrahim al-Jabiri, one of the leaders of Iraq's Shiite Sadr Movement, gives an interview during a demonstration by the movement in the capital Baghdad's Tahrir square against corruption in the Iraqi government on March 2, 2018.
Followers of a black-turbaned Shiite cleric are seeing red ahead of Iraq's May elections, allying with the once-powerful communist party for the first time in the country's history.
 / AFP PHOTO / AHMAD AL-RUBAYE
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Supporters of a Shiite cleric are seeing red in the run-up to Iraq's May elections thanks to an unprecedented alliance with the once-powerful communist party.

Populist preacher Moqtada Sadr has defied his clerical rivals and opted to campaign for the May 12 poll alongside former enemies, Marxists who demand a secular state.

"This alliance is a first in Iraq," said Ibrahim Al Jaberi, a Sadrist official.

"It's a revolution by Iraqis who want reforms – both secularists, like the communists, and by moderate Islamists."

Mr Jaberi, a 34-year-old cleric who sports a red beard, heads every Friday to central Baghdad's Tahrir Square to address hundreds of anti-government protesters.

"This alliance is no surprise because for more than two years we've been fighting together in every province against sectarianism," he said.

Civil society activists launched the protest movement in July 2015, demanding reforms, better public services and an end to corruption.

They were later joined by followers of Mr Sadr, the populist scion of a dynasty of religious elders.

"The demands weren't at all sectarian – they were for the rule of law and for a civil state for the citizen," said Raed Fahmi, secretary of the Iraqi Communist Party and an ex-science and technology minister.

"The important thing is that it allowed people from the Islamist movement and secularists to work together," he said.

Communists dominated Iraqi politics in the 1950s, but were crushed and marginalised under dictator Saddam Hussein's Baath Party. Today, the party has just one member of parliament.

Shiite religious parties have come to play a greater role in the years since the US-led 2003 invasion of Iraq that toppled Saddam.

Mr Fahmi said the protest movement had given rise to co-operation "between people who, in principle, have nothing in common ideologically".

"That then evolved into a political alliance," he said.

His office was adorned with a red flag bearing the hammer and sickle alongside the Iraqi flag with the inscription: "God is Greatest".

The alliance, dubbed "Marching towards Reform", is made up of six mostly non-Islamist groups, including the communists, and a Sadr-backed technocratic party called Istiqama ("Integrity").

Mr Sadr has withdrawn his Ahrar bloc from parliament and urged its 33 MPs not to stand in the May poll, in order to make way for the joint list.

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On Tahrir Square, women in black chador smiled but didn't talk to their unveiled counterparts.

Nadia Nasser, a 43-year-old teacher in chador, said their goal was "to change the horrible leaders that have governed us for 14 years".

"I'm sick of corruption. I'm in favour of this alliance because I want to see new faces," she said.

Qassem Mozan, a 42-year-old day labourer, said the alliance was natural.

"The Sadrist movement is open to all parties and confessions," he said "For me, we're one people with a single flag."

Jassem Al Hilfi, a smiling, greying 58-year-old communist who helps organise the protests, said he remembered his first meeting with Mr Sadr, in 2015 in the Shiite holy city of Najaf.

"We presented him with our plans to fight corruption and create a civilian state through the ballot box. He listened to us and said he was willing and ready to co-operate," he said.

Mr Hilfi and Mr Sadr have met every two weeks since.

Mr Jaberi said some say "it's impossible" for secularists and the religious to work together.

But "it's not an ideological alliance", he said. "Everyone has their convictions."

That hasn't shielded the coalition from heavy criticism by other powerful Shiite religious parties.

"They launched a war against our list and attack us on their TV channels," Mr Jaberi said, smiling. "That shows how weak the corrupt are and how strong we are."

Meanwhile, the Independent High Electoral Commission announced the countries in which Iraqis abroad can cast their votes. The countries include the US, Turkey, Iran, Sweden, UK, Australia, Canada, Jordan, Germany, Holland, Denmark Egypt, UAE, Finland, New Zealand, Lebanon, Vienna and Belgium.