Expatriates in Utah among voting Iraqis
World's polling stations report strong turnouts
"I feel it is a duty I need to do," said Benan Zahawi of Salt Lake City. "I have several good friends running for posts and hoping, if elected, they can help."
Zahawi on Thursday is flying to Oakland, Calif., to vote. This is the second time the Iraqi native will have gone to California to vote. Last January, he was part of a group of about 50 mostly Shiite Iraqis who traveled twice to Irvine once to register and then to vote. Zahawi believes about the same number of Utah Iraqis are casting ballots this week.
Zahawi, 50, said he believes Islam should play a role in Iraq's emerging government, but he is wary of extremists.
"All of us do hope, the first thing is stability . . . and restoring basic needs for the Iraqi people," he said. "And more than that, a government that actually rules by the rule of law, not like we had before."
Strong voter turnout was seen in polling stations around the world, including Syria, Jordan and Iran, where Associated Press reporters witnessed heavier turnout compared to Iraq's landmark January elections. Official turnout figures were not immediately available.
Sunni Arab, Shiite and Kurdish concerns were reflected among many of the Iraqis living in neighboring countries, Europe and the United States. Voters came from all stages of their country's stormy past those who fled Saddam Hussein's regime, and others who left amid the 2003 U.S.-led invasion or took refuge abroad from the relentless bloodshed that followed.
Iyad al-Iraqi, 22, a Sunni Arab voting in the Jordanian capital, Amman, said he hoped the elections would bring more "Muslim Arabs" to power.
"We hated living under Saddam, but at least it was safer then. Give us a thousand like Saddam but not a single American to rule us," he said.
Sunnis at home and abroad largely shunned Jan. 30 elections for an interim parliament that wrote the nation's constitution Iraq's first free vote in decades. The result was a legislature dominated by members of the Shiite Muslim majority and the strong Kurdish minority.
This time Sunnis in Iraq are pressing for a strong turnout to build their numbers in the 275-member legislature and the response in predominantly Sunni Jordan and Syria suggested the communities there were answering the call.
Voting also appeared heavy among Iraqis in mainly Shiite Iran, a close ally of the Shiite parties that control the current government in Baghdad. Hundreds lined up at a polling station in southern Tehran to cast ballots.
In Qom, a center of Shiite religious studies, Iraqis most of them seminarians also converged at polling stations, the official Islamic Republic News Agency said.
Comments
- Many-splendored container garden 3:29 p.m.
- California's $26B deficit 3:25 p.m.
- Eat your squash and blossoms 3:21 p.m.
- Searchers shovel seeking giant worm 3:18 p.m.
- Canal breaks, causes landslide in Logan 3:16 p.m.
- Crash kills Arizona woman 3:13 p.m.
- Lost crab pots 2:56 p.m.
- Lightning delays shuttle launch 2:54 p.m.
- Sweating can be big stuff 2:53 p.m.
- Exhumation finds 1 body in grave 2:41 p.m.
- Jazz brass debate Millsap match
- LDS seminary principal arrested
- 2 men cited on LDS plaza
- Jazz finances not quite so bleak
- Reactions on Boozer speculation
- Utahns among Texans' investors
- HBO defends U. logo use in 'Love'
- Cash for Clunkers to get rolling soon
- 10 years after the flood
- Jazz rookies quiet Thunder youngsters
- LDS seminary principal arrested
282 - Jazz brass debate Millsap match
181 - 2 men cited on LDS plaza
142 - Bronco collecting a galaxy of recruits
141 - Jazz talking Boozer trade?
140 - Blazers may offer Millsap a contract
124 - Stadium of Fire flag burning was fake
99 - Fairness of BCS debated
82 - Letters: Single-payer system best
76 - Services bids farewell to Jackson
70
As more and more dads are put out of work in this economy, I've been...
The photographs are mysterious, brooding, dark. They show dimples and...
I forgot what I was going to say. Let's go ride bikes!
He was murdered by his mistress, not by terrorists while he was trying to...
anon | 1:42 p.m. July 11, 2009 you said: " I really wish the media weren't...
I think the cheaper option is to trade Maynor and go with Kruger. I thought...
But I am very disappointed in the way this is being handled. For his...
BYU is clearly the better team of the two, they have proven that for the past...
Private property is private property. If you don't follow the wishes of the...
Looks like Portland is in the process of putting one over on the Jazz! We...
Whoa! This is another insane idea from this administration.
Big deal. 17 goals in 81 games is crap. He won't play in Europe so the...



You can be the first to comment on this story.