On Monday, Iraq’s Independent High Electoral Commission announced the cancellation of the results of 103 vote centres of parliamentary elections, which were held on 12 May, after the verification of dozens of “red complaints.” The “red complaints” are those that Electoral Commission deems “extremely serious violations (such as forgery and manipulation) that affect the outcome of competing lists at the vote centres.” In a statement that Anadolu News Agency obtained a copy of, the Commission said that “the Board of Commissioners (the exclusive authority which deals with complaints in the Electoral Commission) has investigated 1,436 complaints that have been submitted about the voting day, and have then been classified by the specialized committees in the Council.”
It pointed out that there were 33 “red complaints” and after checking them, these complaints resulted in the cancellation of the results of 103 vote centres in the governorates of Al-Anbar , Nineveh, Saladin and Erbil as well as Baghdad, out of 53,000 voting centres across the country.
The Commission did not explain the effects of the cancellation of the votes of these offices on the announced results of the elections.
With regard to the appeals on the results of the elections, the Commission said that it still receiving appeals in its offices in the governorates and the capital Baghdad, and it will later issue its final decisions on them, without mentioning a specific date.
Full Article: Iraq: Electoral Commission cancels results of 103 vote centres – Middle East Monitor.