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The election has pitted incumbent Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki against fellow Shiite, but secular challenger Ayad Allawi. Allawi's Iraqiya coalition, heavily backed by the country's Sunni Arab minority, won 91 seats compared to al-Maliki's 89 seats, but the prime minister has challenged the results at every turn. On Monday, Allawi told reporters he has been trying for days to meet with al-Maliki and begin hammering out a compromise. But he vowed again to fight attempts to overturn the election results that gave his political party the lead. Efforts to disqualify some of its winning candidates who are accused of links to the outlawed Baath Party "must be halted," he said. "We refuse humiliation and we won't stand still if the harm against Iraqiya continues," Allawi said. The election results have yet to be certified by the country's highest court
-- which must happen before any new government can be formed -- and a recount demanded by al-Maliki in Baghdad is ongoing. If the results are overturned or Allawi is not perceived as the winner deserving a legitimate shot at forming a government, that could in turn outrage the Sunnis who supported him. Sunni anger at Shiite domination of successive governments was a key reason behind the insurgency. Meanwhile in the outskirts of the northern city of Mosul, at least two people were killed when a suicide bomber detonated a car bomb near a checkpoint, according to Iraqi army colonel Rebwar Younis.
The attack came near a joint security checkpoint run by Iraqi security forces and Kurdish security forces known as the peshmerga, he said. Both of the dead were peshmerga. The joint checkpoints were set up earlier this year under the supervision of American troops as a way to get Iraqi and Kurdish forces working together in areas claimed by both the Kurds and Iraq's federal government. In Tarmiyah, 30 miles (50 kilometers) north of Baghdad, city Mayor Mohammed Jassim was injured when bombs in parked cars targeted his convoy. In all, five people were killed and 18 injured in the attack, said a city police official. And in Iskandariyah, 30 miles (50 kilometers) south of Baghdad, one person was killed and two others injured when a roadside bomb exploded near a closed grocery store, said Maj. Muthana Khalid, a police spokesman .
[Associated
Press;
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