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Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Out-of-country registration and voting OCV |  | Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Out-of-country registration and voting OCV: Encyclopedia II - Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Out-of-country registration and voting OCV |  | The Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq (IECI) also held an "Out-of-Country Registration and Voting Program"; it was conducted by the International Organization for Migration (IOM). The goal of the program was to enable approximately one million eligible voters living outside Iraq to participate in the election of the transitional National Assembly. There are 280,303 registered expatriates. By far the largest group of those eligible to vote are in Iran with significant populations in a number of western countries. Iraqi expatriates vote ...
See also:Iraqi legislative election January 2005, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Results and turnout, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Disruption, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Boycott and legitimacy, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Monitoring, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Structure of the elected government, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Out-of-country registration and voting OCV, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Kurdish regional election, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Governorate council elections |  | | Iraqi legislative election January 2005, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Boycott and legitimacy, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Disruption, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Governorate council elections, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Kurdish regional election, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Monitoring, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Out-of-country registration and voting OCV, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Results and turnout, Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Structure of the elected government |  | |
|  |  | Iraqi legislative election January 2005: Encyclopedia II - Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Out-of-country registration and voting OCV
Iraqi legislative election January 2005 - Out-of-country registration and voting OCV
The Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq (IECI) also held an "Out-of-Country Registration and Voting Program"; it was conducted by the International Organization for Migration (IOM). The goal of the program was to enable approximately one million eligible voters living outside Iraq to participate in the election of the transitional National Assembly. There are 280,303 registered expatriates. By far the largest group of those eligible to vote are in Iran with significant populations in a number of western countries. Iraqi expatriates voted from January 28 to January 30, 2005. International voters could place their ballots in fourteen countries:
- Australia: Melbourne, Shepparton and Sydney
- Canada: Calgary (1), Ottawa (1), and Toronto (3)
- Denmark: Copenhagen
- France: Paris
- Germany: Berlin, Cologne, Mannheim, and Munich
- Iran: Ahvaz, Kermanshah (in Kermanshah province), Mashhad, Orumiyeh, Qom, and Tehran
- Jordan: Amman
- The Netherlands: Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and Zwolle
- Sweden: Gothenburg and Stockholm
- Syria: Damascus
- Turkey: Ankara, Istanbul
- United Arab Emirates: Abu Dhabi, Dubai
- United Kingdom: Glasgow, London, and Manchester
- United States: Chicago, Illinois; Detroit, Michigan; Los Angeles, California; Nashville, Tennessee; and Washington, D.C.
The preliminary tally of these votes was released by the IECI on February 4, 2005. They found the United Iraqi Alliance in the lead with 36.15% of the vote. According to the Jerusalem Post the full totals were:
- United Iraqi Alliance - 95,318 votes or 36.15%
- Democratic Patriotic Alliance of Kurdistan - 78,062 votes, or 29.6%
- Iraqi List - 24,136 votes, or 9.15%
- National Rafidain List - 18,538 votes, or 7.03%.
- People's Union - 11,640 votes, or 4.41%
- Iraq Turkman Front - 6,329 votes, or 2.40%
- National Assyrian Group - 4,198 votes, or 1.59%
- The Iraqis - 2,315 votes, or 0.88%
These results are not representative of the vote in Iraq itself. Iraqi Christians, who are the base of support for the National Rafidain List and the National Assyrian Group, are heavily overrepresented in exile communities as are Kurds.
An evaluation of the OCV program by the International Mission for Iraqi Elections is available on the IMIE Web site[10]
Other related archives2003, 2003 invasion of Iraq, 2005, Abu Dhabi, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, Adnan Pachachi, Ahvaz, Al-Anbar governorate council election, Ali al-Sistani, Amman, Amman, Jordan, Amsterdam, Anbar, Ankara, Association of Muslim Scholars, Australia, Ayad Allawi, Ayatollah, Ba'athist, Babil governorate council election, Baghdad, Berlin, Calgary, Canada, Chicago, Illinois, Cologne, Complete results, Constitution for Iraq, Constitutional Monarchy Movement, Copenhagen, Dahuk, Damascus, Dec 2005, Democratic Patriotic Alliance of Kurdistan, Denmark, Detroit, Michigan, Dubai, Elections in Iraq, February 13, February 4, France, Germany, Glasgow, Gothenburg, Governorate Councils, Hare quota, Ibrahim al-Jaafari, Independent Democrats Movement, Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq, International Organization for Migration, Iran, Iraq, Iraq Turkman Front, Iraqi, Iraqi Islamic Party, Iraqi Kurdistan legislative election, 2005, Iraqi List, Iraqi National Assembly, Iraqi Transitional Government, Iraqi governorate elections, Jan 2005, Iraqi insurgency, Islamist, Istanbul, Jalal Talabani, January 28, January 30, Jean-Pierre Kingsley, Jordan, Kermanshah, Kermanshah province, Kurdish, Kurdish Autonomous Region, Kurdistan Regional Government, Law of Administration for the State of Iraq for the Transitional Period, London, Los Angeles, California, Manchester, Mannheim, Mashhad, Melbourne, Munich, Muslim, Nashville, Tennessee, National Assembly, National Rafidain List, Ninawa governorate council election, Orumiyeh, Ottawa, Paris, People's Union, Political parties in Iraq, President, Prime Minister, Qom, Ratified constitution, Rotterdam, Scott Ritter, Shepparton, Shi'a, Stockholm, Sunni, Sweden, Sydney, Syria, Tehran, The Iraqis, The Netherlands, Toronto, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, United Iraqi Alliance, United Kingdom, United Nations, United States, Voter turnout, Washington, D.C., Worker-Communist Party of Iraq, Zwolle, general election, holy war, largest remainder method, majority, occupation, proportional representation, registered, representatives, scrutineers, suicide bombing, vote of confidence
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Out-of-country registration and voting OCV", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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