Choices Vary in Shia Areas
Voters in the south may be solidly behind the election, but support for the main Shia-led faction is not monolithic.
Voters in the south may be solidly behind the election, but support for the main Shia-led faction is not monolithic.
Shia queue up to make their voices heard in city of Nassriyah.
Organisers of poll fear Iraqi Kurdistan will lose its autonomy if local leaders become too deeply embroiled in Baghdad politics.
Attacks against polling stations appear to have failed to deter much of the capital’s electorate.
Insurgents shoot off voters’ ink-stained fingers in Baaqubah.
Parties in Iraqi Kurdistan accuse each other of election fraud.
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani’s call for Shia to vote brought out many of the old and frail.
Following an election in which turnout seems to have been unexpectedly high, people’s minds are already turning to the new National Assembly.
Electoral officials estimate 60 per cent turnout as polling stations sift and collate two sets of election results.
By Hussein Ali al-Yasiry in Diwaniyah (ICR No. 108, 01-Feb-05)