|
BAGHDAD, Jan 30, (Xinhuanet) -- The polls
have closed, but a doorof hope has opened for Iraq.
Millions of Iraqis across the country headed to voting stationson Sunday in Iraq's first elections since the former regime wasdowned in April 2003, defying insurgents who made good of
threatsto attack voters who chose to vote for a better future.
No car bombs were reported throughout the day thanks
tointensified security measures taken by US-Iraqi forces, buthardcore insurgents
wearing explosive-laden belts blew upthemselves outside several voting stations
with queues of voters.
Around 14 million Iraqis, about half of the
population,registered to vote in the elections. Some eligible voters did
notregister either due to intimidation or because they were boycottingthe polls.
But the majority say nothing can stop them fromparticipating in Sunday's
elections.
The Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) previously
saidpreliminary figures indicated 72 percent of the 14 millionregistered voters
turned out two hours before the polls closed.However, the organizing body later
played down the turnout to about60 percent.
Iraqi President Ghazi al-Yawar was among the first to
voteSunday shortly after the polling stations opened at 7 a.m. (0400GMT).
Smiling as he walked out of the polling booth, the
Sunni Arableader said, "Thanks God. I hope everyone will go out and vote,
Godwilling."
Iraqi interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi later cast
his vote inthe heavily-fortified Green Zone complex in Baghdad, home to the
USand the interim Iraqi government.
Speaking to reporters outside the voting booth, a
beaming Allawisaid the very fact that the election went as scheduled was
anachievement.
"This is an accomplishment the government and myself
are veryproud of," he said. "This is the start of a new era. For the firsttime,
Iraqis are deciding on their own future and defying theterrorist forces."
The Iraqi interim government has pulled out all stops
to ensurea smooth voting, deploying tens of thousands of security forcesacross
the country and imposing traffic restrictions in majorcities.
While insurgent groups' threats to wash cities with
voters'blood if they dare venture out, hundreds of thousands of voters,with
bring-them-on attitude, braved potential mortar or rocketattacks in order to
have their voices heard in a process to reshapethe country's future political
life.
Capt. Aysar, a police officer guarding a Baghdad
Mansourdistrict polling station, told Xinhua that people were not scaredaway
from the polls as a suicide bomber who blew himself up just afew hours ago in
the area.
Najiba Mehdi, 73, who cast his ballot at a polling
booth inKadhimiya district in Baghdad, said "I am here to exercise my
legalright. Electing Iraqi leaders can ensure my children's safety. I amold. I
just want to do something for them."
Mehdi was not alone. Her voice was echoed by Alwan
Albulush, alawyer, who told Xinhua inside a Mansour booth, "I am very
veryexcited today. I think every ballot is a bullet fired atterrorists. All
Iraqis should come and vote. We need an electedgovernment which should be strong
enough to say no to the USforces."
The government's repeated calls for voters'
participation andheavy guarding paid off as voters headed to the polling
centerseven in Sunni-dominated restive cities like Falluja, Ramadi andSamarra.
Abdul Rahman, a Falluja resident, said, "people
expressed theirhope by voting that the new government will reward them
byrebuilding their destroyed houses. People are so desperate becauseonly about
20 percent of the city population returned to theirhouses or the remains of
their houses."
The US-Iraqi forces launched an all-out offensive on
Fallujalast November in an effort to uproot insurgents there. The weeks-long
attack virtually reduced the Sunni stronghold to rubble andforced most of
250,000 residents to flee.
Some other regions witnessed soaring turnout. In the
Kurdishregions in northern Iraq, where security is tighter, there was asteady
flow of people to the polls, live television picturesshowed.
In the southern city of Najaf, capital of Iraq's
Shiiteheartland and site of the sect's holiest shrine, people flocked tothe
polling stations with a tight security ring.
Sunday's elections began at 7:00 a.m. (0400 GMT) and
closed at5:00 p.m. (1400 GMT). Iraqi officials hope for a turnout of atleast 50
percent to lend legitimacy to the elections, which areexpected to usher in a new
era for the oil-rich but violence-shattered country.
The elections were designed to choose a 275-seat
NationalAssembly which will pick up a transitional government and overseethe
writing of a permanent constitution put for a nationalreferendum by Oct. 15.
In addition, some 280,000 Iraqi expatriates, about a
quarter ofthe eligible, have registered to vote and the
InternationalOrganization for Migration which is in charge of the
out-of-countryvoting said nearly two-thirds of them had voted since
overseaspolling stations opened in 14 countries on Friday.
Enditem |