Lawmaker Muqdad al-Shuraifi, a member of the new election commission, said legislators on Thursday chose Turkmen representative Gülşan Kemal Ali as the body's ninth member.
Last week, parliament approved the other eight members but stalled on the ninth because various blocs could not agree on whether to choose a Christian or a Turkmen.
The Independent High Electoral Commission is considered one of
A Sunni-backed bloc narrowly won the most seats in those elections. Although it was not enough to secure an overall majority, its strong showing was a surprise in the Shiite-dominated country.
Supporters of Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki repeatedly demanded recounts and complained the vote was plagued with fraud. International observers called the vote and ballot count fair. After a torturous recount, also supervised by the IHEC, the original results were widely found to be accurate.
Al-Maliki eventually kept his job after managing to form a broader Shiite collation.
The previous panel also faced corruption charges against some of its members, including commission chief Faraj Al-Haidari.
Shiite lawmaker Ali al-Allaq said 7,800 people applied for jobs on the new commission and nine were selected from 60 finalists.
"Only the best were chosen," said al-Allaq, adding that U.N. officials supervised the selection process.
Along with the Turkmen Kemal, the new IHEC — which is drawn from
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