Former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi edged past Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Al-Maliki Tuesday in results from Iraq's fragmented March 7 vote that may lead to months of political bargaining and create a risky power vacuum. The development was a reversal of results so far which had shown Maliki in the lead and was announced on a day when twin bomb attacks in the town of Mussayab, 60 km (40 miles) south of the capital. Eight people died in the two bombings five minutes apart on the main street of an Iraqi town south of Baghdad Tuesday, nine days after an election Iraqis hoped would bring more stability and less sectarian conflict. Police said attackers attached so-called sticky bombs to two cars carrying passengers in the town of Mussayab, about 60 km (40 miles) south of the capital. Eleven others were wounded in the attacks, police said. The blasts, a day after seven people were killed by a car bomb in western Anbar province, raised doubts about how Iraq's fragile security will stand up during what likely will be long, divisive talks among leading politicians to form a government. Allawi's narrow lead in the national vote count over Maliki's mainly Shiite State of Law bloc, which is ahead in seven of 18 provinces but has barely made a dent in Sunni areas, was somewhat of a surprise and underlines Iraq's polarisation after years of sectarian war. Allawi, a secular Shiite whose cross-sectarian, secularist Iraqiya list is now ahead in five provinces, has galvanized support among minority Sunnis eager to reclaim the influence they lost when Saddam Hussein's long rule ended in 2003. With about 80 percent of an estimated 12 million votes counted, only about 9,000 votes separate Maliki's and Allawi's coalitions. Definitive results could take weeks. One or the other bloc is likely to ally with the Iraqi National Alliance (INA), a largely Shiite bloc made up of Maliki's estranged allies, running third, or with a partnership of Kurdish parties which dominated Iraq's Kurdish north. While Maliki, who has built his reputation on pulling Iraq back from the brink of civil war, has wide support, Allawi, an urbane physician and critic of the mainly Shiite religious parties dominating Iraq since 2003, and his allies were feeling confident. Thaer Al-Naqeeb, a close aide to Allawi, said even before his candidate pulled ahead that a government without Iraqiya representation would be “difficult”. “Our expectations are that we will be the ones to form the government. In the north we are No. 1 and we are in a good position in Baghdad ... If the Iraqi people demand change and are waiting for a change, then there should be change.”