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100 photos of Iraq's enduring freedom election. Thanks and credit to Yahoo news.
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| Jan 30
| various
Posted on 01/30/2005 5:37:56 AM PST by dennisw
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Results 1 - 100 of about 1,350 for iraq elections.
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- An Iraqi Army soldier guards a polling station in a vehicle with a sign which reads in Arabic, ' No terrorism after today' in Mosul January 30, 2005. Iraq 's first multiparty polls in half a century began at dawn on Sunday, elections intended to unite the country but which could instead foment sectarian strife and which insurgents have vowed to turn into a bloodbath. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra
Reuters - 11 minutes ago
- Thousands of Iraqis make a pilgrimage to the polling station in Al Alamara, Iraq , January 30, 2005, as the country holds its first elections. Iraqi officials hope for a turnout of at least 50 percent to lend legitimacy to the outcome. Officials expect preliminary results in six to seven days and final results in about 10 days. REUTERS/James Vellacott/Pool
Reuters - 10 minutes ago
- Iraqi Army soldiers guard a polling station as a voters enter to cast their vote in Mosul January 30, 2005 . Iraq 's first multiparty polls in half a century began at dawn on Sunday, elections intended to unite the country but which could instead foment sectarian strife and which insurgents have vowed to turn into a bloodbath. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra
Reuters - 12 minutes ago
- An Iraqi man shows his dye-stained finger -- signifying he has voted - at a polling station in Basra, southern Iraq , January 30, 2005, as the country holds its first elections. REUTERS/Toby Melville
Reuters - 17 minutes ago
- An Iraqi veiled woman her right index finger stained with blue ink and small banner 'Elect Iraq ' after she casting her vote in Amman polling station Januray 30 2005. Thousands of Iraqis voted abroad Sunday as their compatriots at home braved bombs and threats to go the polls in the first multi-party election in 50 years. REUTERS/Ali Jarekji
Reuters - 17 minutes ago
- British Police look on as demonsrators protest against the voting for the Iraq elections, which is taking place at the London voting centre in Wembley, Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005. Protesters from several groups held demonstrations against the elections urging Iraqis to boycott the vote. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)
AP - 13 minutes ago
- An Iraqi Shi'ite woman chants a prayer as she walks out of a polling station after casting her vote in eastern Baghdad, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Ali Jasim
Reuters - 44 minutes ago
- A crowd of Iraqi women wait at the entrance of a polling station waiting to vote in their country's national election, in the holy city of Najaf, January 30, 2005. Insurgents bent on wrecking Iraq 's historic election killed two people in a string of bomb and mortar attacks across the country Sunday soon after voting began in the first multi-party ballot in half a century. REUTERS/Faleh Kheiber
Reuters - 52 minutes ago
- An Iraqi voter raises his hands after casting his ballot in national elections in Baghdad January 30, 2005. Insurgents bent on wrecking Iraq 's historic election killed two people in a string of bomb and mortar attacks across the country Sunday soon after voting began in the first multi-party ballot in half a century. REUTERS/Ceerwan Aziz
Reuters - 52 minutes ago
- An Iraqi police officer checks a donkey, pulling a disabled man on a cart, before allowing it to enter a polling station in the country's second largest city of Basra, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Atef Hassan
Reuters - 50 minutes ago
- An Iraqi elderly woman registers her name in a polling station in the holy city of Najaf, January 30, 2005. Insurgents threatening an election day bloodbath killed at least 22 people on Sunday in a string of bombings and mortar attacks on polling stations in Iraq 's first multi-party ballot in half a century. REUTERS/Faleh Kheiber
Reuters - 47 minutes ago
- An Iraqi man raises his arms to be searched before entering a polling station to vote in national elections in Baghdad January 30, 2005. Insurgents bent on wrecking Iraq 's historic election killed two people in a string of bomb and mortar attacks across the country Sunday soon after voting began in the first multi-party ballot in half a century. REUTERS/Ceerwan Aziz
Reuters - 52 minutes ago
- An Iraqi woman cries tears of joy after casting her vote, outside a polling station in the holy city of Najaf, January 30, 2005. Insurgents threatening an election day bloodbath killed at least 22 people Sunday in a string of bombings and mortar attacks on polling stations in Iraq 's first multi-party ballot in half a century. REUTERS/Faleh Kheiber
Reuters - 48 minutes ago
- An Iraqi woman studies her ballot as she votes in national elections in Baghdad January 30, 2005. Iraq 's first multiparty polls in half a century began at dawn on Sunday, elections intended to unite the country but which could instead foment sectarian strife and which insurgents have vowed to turn into a bloodbath. REUTERS/Akram Saleh
Reuters - 52 minutes ago
- U.S. Army soldiers secure a street after a suicide bomber blew himself up near a polling station in Baghdad January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Ceerwan Aziz
Reuters - 46 minutes ago
- Iraqi Shi'ite women wait in a queue to cast their votes outside a polling station in the holy city of Najaf, January 30, 2005. Insurgents bent on wrecking Iraq 's historic election killed two people in a string of bomb and mortar attacks across the country Sunday soon after voting began in the first multi-party ballot in half a century. REUTERS/Faleh Kheiber
Reuters - 52 minutes ago
- An Iraqi crippled man marks his ballot paper while sitting on a donkey cart inside a polling station in the country's second largest city of Basra, January 30, 2005. Insurgents threatening an election day bloodbath killed at least 22 people on Sunday in a string of bombings and mortar attacks on polling stations in Iraq 's first multi-party ballot in half a century. REUTERS/Atef Hassan
Reuters - 47 minutes ago
- An Iraqi Army soldier stands guard outside a polling station in Baghdad January 30, 2005. Iraq 's first multiparty polls in half a century began at dawn on Sunday, elections intended to unite the country but which could instead foment sectarian strife and which insurgents have vowed to turn into a bloodbath. REUTERS/Akram Saleh
Reuters - 48 minutes ago
- A voter holds her ID as she arrives at a polling station in Sadr City, Baghdad. Arab nations anxiously awaited the results of the first post-Saddam Hussein election in Iraq to see whether it will mark the first step on the road to democracy ... or the start of civil war.(AFP/Sabah Arar)
AFP - 47 minutes ago
- A crippled Iraqi woman, sitting in a wheelchair, casts her vote in a polling station in the southern city of Basra, January 30, 2005. Insurgents threatening an election day bloodbath killed at least 22 people on Sunday in a string of bombings and mortar attacks on polling stations in Iraq 's first multi-party ballot in half a century. REUTERS/Atef Hassan
Reuters - 57 minutes ago
- Iraqi Kurds gather outside a polling station waiting to vote in the northern city of Suleimaniya, January 30, 2005. Insurgents threatening an election day bloodbath killed at least 22 people on Sunday in a string of bombings and mortar attacks on polling stations in Iraq 's first multi-party ballot in half a century. REUTERS/Khalid al-Mousily
Reuters - 56 minutes ago
- Iraqi Kurdish leader Massud Barzani casts his vote in Salahaddin, northern Iraq . Iraqi Kurds flocked to polling stations in northern Iraq to take part in elections they hope will herald a new era for their long-oppressed community.(AFP/Mustafa Ozer)
AFP - 57 minutes ago
- Iraqis wait in a queue to cast their votes in their country's national elections outside a polling station in Iraq 's second largest city of Basra, January 30, 2005. Insurgents bent on wrecking Iraq's historic election killed two people in a string of bomb and mortar attacks across the country Sunday soon after voting began in the first multi-party ballot in half a century. REUTERS/Atef Hassan
Reuters - 53 minutes ago
- Iraqi Shi'ite women line up to participate in their country's national elections, outside a polling station in the holy city of Najaf, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Ali Abu Shish
Reuters - 55 minutes ago
- Iraqis wait in line to cast their votes outside a polling station in the country's second largest city of Basra, January 30, 2005. Insurgents bent on wrecking Iraq 's historic election killed two people in a string of bomb and mortar attacks across the country Sunday soon after voting began in the first multi-party ballot in half a century. REUTERS/Atef Hassan
Reuters - 54 minutes ago
- An Iraqi voter shows his inked finger after casting his ballot in national elections in Baghdad January 30, 2005. Insurgents bent on wrecking Iraq 's historic election killed two people in a string of bomb and mortar attacks across the country Sunday soon after voting began in the first multi-party ballot in half a century. REUTERS/Ceerwan Aziz
Reuters - 53 minutes ago
- An Iraqi woman dips her finger in ink before casting her vote in al-Batool polling station in eastern Baghdad, January 30, 2005. Insurgents threatening an election day bloodbath killed at least 22 people on Sunday in a string of bombings and mortar attacks on polling stations in Iraq 's first multi-party ballot in half a century. REUTERS/Ali Jasim
Reuters - 54 minutes ago
- An Iraqi Shi'ite woman, wearing an Islamic Hijab, casts her vote at a polling station in Iraq 's second largest city of Basra, January 30, 2005. A suicide bomber killed at least six people in a queue outside a polling station in eastern Baghdad on Sunday, in the sixth suicide attack on voting centres in the capital during the election, a government official said. At least 13 people have been killed in the suicide attacks. Five of them were attacks by suicide bombers on foot and one was a suicide car bomb. REUTERS/Atef Hassan
Reuters - 55 minutes ago
- An Iraqi woman cries tears of joy after casting her vote, outside a polling station in the holy city of Najaf, Jan. 30, 2005. Insurgents threatening an election day bloodbath killed at least 22 people Sunday in a string of bombings and mortar attacks on polling stations in Iraq 's first multi-party ballot in half a century. (Faleh Kheiber/Reuters)
Reuters - 1 hour, 6 minutes ago
- Iraqi Shi'ite women wait in line to cast their votes at a polling station in the holy city of Najaf, Jan. 30, 2005. Insurgents threatening an election day bloodbath killed at least 22 people on Sunday in a string of bombings and mortar attacks on polling stations in Iraq 's first multi-party ballot in half a century. Photo by Faleh Kheiber/Reuters
Reuters - 1 hour, 9 minutes ago
- An Iraqi girl looks out of the womens queue at a school polling station in the At Maeel area of Basra, southern Iraq Sunday Jan. 30, 2005, as the country holds its first elections. Iraqi officials hope for a turnout of at least 50 percent to lend legitimacy to the outcome. Officials expect preliminary results in six to seven days and final results in about 10 days. (AP Photo/Toby Melville, Pool)
AP - 1 hour, 23 minutes ago
- Sadiga Glany, aged 75, shows her dye stained finger - signifying she has voted - in Basra, southern Iraq , Sunday Jan. 30, 2005, as the country holds its first elections. Iraqi officials hope for a turnout of at least 50 percent to lend legitimacy to the outcome. Officials expect preliminary results in six to seven days and final results in about 10 days. (AP Photo/Toby Melville, Pool)
AP - 1 hour, 20 minutes ago
- Iraqi women wait to enter a polling station in Najaf, some 160 kilometers (100 miles) south of Baghdad, Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005. Text on the Iraqi flag reads 'vote Iraq '. Iraqis turned out to vote Sunday in their country's first free election in a half-century, defying insurgents who launched deadly suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations. By midday, at least 29 people were dead but the violence had slowed and voting picked up. (AP Photo/Alla al-Marjani)
AP - 1 hour, 20 minutes ago
- ATTENTION EDITORS - VISUALS COVERAGE OF SCENES OF DEATH AND INJURY - Iraqi police and U.S. Army soldiers examine the scene after a suicide bomber blew himself up near a polling station in Baghdad January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Ceerwan Aziz
Reuters - 1 hour, 23 minutes ago
- An Iraqi man uses a wheelchair to reach a polling station in Baghdad, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005 where Iraqis are lining up to vote in their country's first free election in a half-century. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)
AP - 1 hour, 30 minutes ago
- An election official moves ballot papers - his ink dyed finger signifying he has voted - in Basra, southern Iraq , Sunday Jan. 30, 2005, as the country holds its first elections. Iraqi officials hope for a turnout of at least 50 percent to lend legitimacy to the outcome. Officials expect preliminary results in six to seven days and final results in about 10 days.(AP Photo/Toby Melville, Pool)
AP - 1 hour, 25 minutes ago
- Iraqi women line up outside a polling station in the northern Kurdish city of Suleimaniya, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Patrick Baz/Pool
Reuters - 1 hour, 39 minutes ago
- Iraqi's approach an Iraqi Army soldier wrapped in an Iraqi flag on their way to a polling station in Baghdad, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005 where Iraqis are lining up to vote in their country's first free election in a half-century. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)
AP - 1 hour, 38 minutes ago
- After all car movements were prohibited, thousands of Iraqis make a trip on foot to the town of Al Alamara, Iraq , watched by British troops, to place their votes Sunday, Jan. 30 2005. Iraqis turned out to vote Sunday in their country's first free election in a half-century, defying insurgents who launched deadly suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations. By midday, at least 29 people were dead but the violence had slowed and voting picked up.(AP Photo / Daily Mirror/James Vellacott /Pool)
AP - 1 hour, 48 minutes ago
- After all car movements were prohibited, thousands of Iraqis make a trip on foot to the town of Al Alamara, Iraq , watched by British troops, to place their votes Sunday, Jan. 30 2005. Iraqis turned out to vote Sunday in their country's first free election in a half-century, defying insurgents who launched deadly suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations. By midday, at least 29 people were dead but the violence had slowed and voting picked up.(AP Photo / Daily Mirror/James Vellacott /Pool)
AP - 1 hour, 48 minutes ago
- After all car movements were prohibited, thousands of Iraqis make a trip on foot to the town of Al Alamara, Iraq , to place their votes Sunday, Jan. 30 2005. Iraqis turned out to vote Sunday in their country's first free election in a half-century, defying insurgents who launched deadly suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations. By midday, at least 29 people were dead but the violence had slowed and voting picked up.(AP Photo / Daily Mirror/James Vellacott /Pool)
AP - 1 hour, 48 minutes ago
- Disabled Iraqi man Mohammed Karim Khader, 80, is carried on the back of another man on his way to cast his vote in the northern Kurdish city of Suleimaniya, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Patrick Baz/Pool
Reuters - 1 hour, 44 minutes ago
- Iraqi Shi'ite men smile as they show their registration forms, while waiting to cast their votes at a polling station in the holy city of Najaf, January 30, 2005.Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Faleh Kheiber
Reuters - 1 hour, 56 minutes ago
- Iraqi women cast their votes in a polling station in the country's second largest city of Basra, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Atef Hassan
Reuters - 1 hour, 49 minutes ago
- Iraqi men mark their ballots behind voting booths in polling station in the southern city of Diwaniya, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Jafar Sadiq
Reuters - 1 hour, 50 minutes ago
- A British soldier from 3 Company Welsh Guards, stands watch with an Iraqi police officer as thousands of Iraqis make a trip on foot to the town of Al Alamara, Iraq , to place their votes Sunday, Jan. 30 2005. Iraqis turned out to vote Sunday in their country's first free election in a half-century, defying insurgents who launched deadly suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations. By midday, at least 29 people were dead but the violence had slowed and voting picked up.(AP Photo / Daily Mirror/James Vellacott /Pool)
AP - 1 hour, 54 minutes ago
- Iraqi boys play with a soccer ball as all traffic is banned on the streets of Baghdad, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005 while Iraqis walk to vote in their country's first free election in a half-century. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)
AP - 1 hour, 55 minutes ago
- An Iraqi police officer (L) and an Army soldier take positions at a polling station after it came under attack in eastern Baghdad, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Ali Jasim
Reuters - 1 hour, 55 minutes ago
- After all car movements were prohibited, thousands of Iraqis make a trip on foot to the town of Al Alamara, Iraq , to place their votes Sunday, Jan. 30 2005. Iraqis turned out to vote Sunday in their country's first free election in a half-century, defying insurgents who launched deadly suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations. By midday, at least 29 people were dead but the violence had slowed and voting picked up.(AP Photo / Daily Mirror/James Vellacott /Pool)
AP - 1 hour, 56 minutes ago
- A British soldier from 3 Company Welsh Guards, watches as Iraqis make a trip on foot to the town of Al Alamara, Iraq , to place their votes Sunday, Jan. 30 2005. Iraqis turned out to vote Sunday in their country's first free election in a half-century, defying insurgents who launched deadly suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations. By midday, at least 29 people were dead but the violence had slowed and voting picked up.(AP Photo / Daily Mirror/James Vellacott /Pool)
AP - 1 hour, 52 minutes ago
- An Iraqi woman with her daughter casts her ballot at a polling station in Amman, Jordan, Sunday Jan. 30, 2005. As people in Iraq defied insurgent threats and voted Sunday in their country's first independent election in five decades. Iraqis living in Jordan streamed into polling stations to cast their ballots in the last day of overseas voting.(AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
AP - 2 hours, 2 minutes ago
- Iraqi women stand in a queue as they wait to cast their votes at a polling station in the holy city of Najaf, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country.REUTERS/Faleh Kheiber
Reuters - 2 hours, 0 minute ago
- An Iraqi disabled man arrives at a polling station on a donkey cart to cast his vote in the country's second largest city of Basra, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Atef Hassan
Reuters - 2 hours, 3 minutes ago
- An Iraqi man guides his elderly father as they walk to a nearby polling station in the southern city of Diwaniya, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Jafar Sadiq
Reuters - 1 hour, 58 minutes ago
- A Kurdish Iraqi woman casts her vote at a polling station in the northern Kurdish city of Suleimaniya January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Patrick Baz/Pool
Reuters - 2 hours, 6 minutes ago
- An Iraqi woman checks her ballot papers after voting at a polling station in Baghdad, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005 where Iraqis are lining up to vote in their country's first free election in a half-century. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)
AP - 2 hours, 12 minutes ago
- Election billboards of Iraqi interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi posted on a bus carrying Iraqi voters to a polling station in Amman, Jordan, Sunday Jan. 30, 2005. As people in Iraq defied insurgent threats and voted Sunday in their country's first independent election in five decades, Iraqis living in Jordan streamed into polling stations to cast their ballots in the last day of overseas voting. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
AP - 2 hours, 11 minutes ago
- Iraqis receive voting instructions at a polling station in the holy city of Najaf, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Faleh Kheiber
Reuters - 2 hours, 17 minutes ago
- Iraqis hold up copies of their voting registrations as they celebrate their participation in the country's national elections in the holy city of Najaf, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Faleh Kheiber
Reuters - 2 hours, 18 minutes ago
- Fatima Barzani casts her ballot at a polling station for the Iraqi elections in downtown Erbil, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30. 2005. She and her mother-in-law are 'Anfal Women' - widows and daughters of 8,000 Barzani men reportedly killed by Saddam Hussein during the 1980's. Kurds in scores attended the election in the hope of gaining a significant voice in the interim Iraqi Parliament. (AP Photo/Sasa Kralj)
AP - 2 hours, 20 minutes ago
- An Iraqi Army soldier stands guard near a queue of Iraqi men waiting to cast their votes outside a polling station in the holy city of Najaf, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Faleh Kheiber
Reuters - 2 hours, 19 minutes ago
- Iraqi's line up to vote outside a polling station in Baghdad January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Ceerwan Aziz
Reuters - 2 hours, 13 minutes ago
- Iraqi women arrive at a polling station to cast their vote in Mosul January 30, 2005 . Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra
Reuters - 2 hours, 14 minutes ago
- An Iraqi security officer reacts at a polling station after it came under attack in eastern Baghdad, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Ali Jasim
Reuters - 2 hours, 25 minutes ago
- 30-year-old Fatima Barzani followed by her mother in law, queue to cast their ballots for the Iraqi elections at a polling station in downtown Erbil, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30. 2005. They are 'Anfal Women' - widows and daughters of 8,000 Barzani men reportedly killed by Saddam Hussein during the 1980's. Kurds in scores attended the election in the hope of gaining a significant voice in the interim Iraqi Parliament. (AP Photo / Sasa Kralj)
AP - 2 hours, 21 minutes ago
- Election official assists 65 year old Salha Omar with election ink as she casts her ballot at a polling station in downtown Erbil, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30. 2005. She and daughter-in-law are 'Anfal Women' - widows and daughters of 8,000 Barzani men reportedly killed by Saddam Hussein during the 1980's. Kurds in scores attended the election in the hope of gaining a significant voice in the interim Iraqi Parliament. (AP Photo/Sasa Kralj)
AP - 2 hours, 25 minutes ago
- Iraqi voters take cover following an attack against the polling station where in eastern Baghdad, January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 22 people and wounding dozens in suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations across the country.. REUTERS/Ali Jasim
Reuters - 2 hours, 22 minutes ago
- An Iraqi woman raises her arms during security check while queuing to vote in the national polls in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 20 people and wounding dozens at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - 2 hours, 34 minutes ago
- An Iraqi villager raises his arms during security check while queuing to vote for the national polls in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 20 people and wounding dozens at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - 2 hours, 31 minutes ago
- An Iraqi Army soldier searches a voter before allowing him to enter a polling station in Mosul January 30, 2005 . Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq 's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 20 people and wounding dozens at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra
Reuters - 2 hours, 30 minutes ago
- An Iraqi election worker waits for more voters to arrive in the early morning hours at a polling station in Baghdad, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005. Iraqis are voting in their country's first free election in a half-century. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)
AP - 2 hours, 34 minutes ago
- A member of Iraqi National Guard inspects the bag of a villager queuing to vote in the national polls in a polling precinct in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 20 people and wounding dozens at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - 2 hours, 42 minutes ago
- Iraqi villagers queue to vote in the national polls in a polling precinct in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 20 people and wounding dozens at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - 2 hours, 44 minutes ago
- A U.S. marines stand on guard near Iraqis queuing to vote in the national polls in a polling precinct in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 20 people and wounding dozens at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - 2 hours, 40 minutes ago
- A U.S. marines stand on guard near Iraqis queuing to vote in the national polls in a polling precinct in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 20 people and wounding dozens at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - 2 hours, 37 minutes ago
- Iraqi villagers walk to a voting precinct to vote in the national polls in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 20 people and wounding dozens at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - 2 hours, 39 minutes ago
- An Iraqi woman holds an election information pamphlet while queuing to vote in the national polls in a polling precinct in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 20 people and wounding dozens at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - 2 hours, 37 minutes ago
- U.S. marines assist an Iraqi woman voting in the national polls in a polling precinct in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 20 people and wounding dozens at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - 2 hours, 42 minutes ago
- Iraqi villagers queue to vote in the national polls in a polling precinct in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. A suicide bomber strapped with explosives killed two policemen in the latest attack on polling centres during Sunday's election, police sources said. At least eight suicide bombs exploded outside Baghdad polling stations, killing at least 19 people. Seven of the suicide bombers walked up to the voting stations on foot and one used a car bomb. REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - 2 hours, 46 minutes ago
- Iraqi election workers wait for early morning for voters to arrive to their polling station in Baghdad, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005. Iraqis are voting in their country's first free election in a half-century. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)
AP - 2 hours, 53 minutes ago
- Iraqi women queue to vote for the national polls in a polling precinct in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. Insurgents unleashed a wave of bloody attacks on Iraq's historic election on Sunday, killing at least 20 people and wounding dozens at polling stations across the country. REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - 2 hours, 45 minutes ago
- Iraqi women receive ballot papers in a polling station in Baghdad, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005 where Iraqis are lining up to vote in their country's first free election in a half-century. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)
AP - Jan 30 2:23 AM
- An Iraqi villager raises his arms to show he's not armed during security check while queueing to vote for the national polls in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. A suicide bomber strapped with explosives killed two policemen in the latest attack on polling centres during Sunday's election, police sources said. At least eight suicide bombs exploded outside Baghdad polling stations, killing at least 19 people. Seven of the suicide bombers walked up to the voting stations on foot and one used a car bomb. REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - Jan 30 2:09 AM
- Election officials advise which finger to dip in the election ink to 93 year old Ajsa Rasul Haras and her son, at the polling station in downtown Erbil, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30. 2005. Kurds in scores attended elections in a hope of gaining a significant voice in the interim Iraqi Parliament. (AP Photo/Sasa Kralj)
AP - Jan 30 2:14 AM
- An Iraqi family approaches a US Army checkpoint on their way to a polling station in Baghdad, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005 where Iraqis are lining up to vote in their country's first free election in a half-century. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)
AP - Jan 30 2:16 AM
- Iraqi women queue to vote for the national polls in a polling precinct in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. A suicide bomber strapped with explosives killed two policemen in the latest attack on polling centres during Sunday's election, police sources said. At least eight suicide bombs exploded outside Baghdad polling stations, killing at least 19 people. Seven of the suicide bombers walked up to the voting stations on foot and one used a car bomb REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - Jan 30 2:11 AM
- An Iraqi women hold election information pamphlets while queuing to vote for the national polls in a polling precinct in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. A suicide bomber strapped with explosives killed two policemen in the latest attack on polling centres during Sunday's election, police sources said. At least eight suicide bombs exploded outside Baghdad polling stations, killing at least 19 people. Seven of the suicide bombers walked up to the voting stations on foot and one used a car bomb. REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - Jan 30 2:14 AM
- Election officials advise which finger to dip in the election ink to 93 year old Ajsa Rasul Haras and her son, at the polling station in downtown Erbil, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30. 2005. Kurds in scores attended elections in a hope of gaining a significant voice in the interim Iraqi Parliament. (AP Photo/Sasa Kralj)
AP - Jan 30 2:14 AM
- A member Iraqi National Guard stand near villagers villagers queueing to vote for the national polls in a polling precinct in Al Anbar province 23 kilometres west of Baghdad,Iraq January 30, 2005. A suicide bomber strapped with explosives killed two policemen in the latest attack on polling centres during Sunday's election, police sources said. At least eight suicide bombs exploded outside Baghdad polling stations, killing at least 19 people. Seven of the suicide bombers walked up to the voting stations on foot and one used a car bomb. REUTERS/Erik de Castro
Reuters - Jan 30 2:10 AM
- An Iraqi man and woman receive voting information at a polling station in Baghdad January 30, 2005. Iraq 's first multiparty polls in half a century began at dawn on Sunday, elections intended to unite the country but which could instead foment sectarian strife and which insurgents have vowed to turn into a bloodbath. REUTERS/Akram Saleh
Reuters - Jan 30 1:52 AM
- An Iraqi elderly man casts his vote at a polling station in Iraq 's second largest city of Basra, January 30, 2005. A suicide bomber killed at least six people in a queue outside a polling station in eastern Baghdad on Sunday, in the sixth suicide attack on voting centres in the capital during the election, a government official said. At least 13 people have been killed in the suicide attacks. Five of them were attacks by suicide bombers on foot and one was a suicide car bomb. REUTERS/Atef Hassan
Reuters - Jan 30 1:38 AM
- A Kurdish Iraqi woman casts her vote at a polling station in the northern Kurdish city of Suleimaniya, Sunday Jan. 30, 2005. Iraqi Kurds flocked to polling stations in northern Iraq to take part in elections they hope will herald a new era for their long-oppressed community. (AP Photo/Patrick Baz, Pool)
AP - Jan 30 1:39 AM
- Iraqi women line up outside a polling station in the northern Kurdish city of Suleimaniya Sunday Jan. 30, 2005. Iraqi Kurds flocked to polling stations in northern Iraq to take part in elections they hope will herald a new era for their long-oppressed community. (AP Photo/Patrick Baz, Pool)
AP - Jan 30 1:37 AM
- Disabled Mohammed Karim Khader, 80, is carried on the shoulder of a man on his way to cast his vote in the northern Kurdish city of Suleimaniya Sunday Jan. 30, 2005. Iraqi Kurds flocked to polling stations in northern Iraq to take part in elections they hope will herald a new era for their long-oppressed community.(AP Photo/Patrick Baz, Pool)
AP - Jan 30 1:38 AM
- An Iraqi Army soldier checks Iraqi female voters outside a polling station in Baghdad, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005 where Iraqis are lining up to vote in their country's first free election in a half-century. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)
AP - Jan 30 1:42 AM
- Omar Fatah , the Prime Minister of the Suleimaniya Kurdish autonomous province, addresses reporters in Suleimaniya, Sunday Jan. 30, 2005. Iraqi Kurds flocked to polling stations in northern Iraq to take part in elections they hope will herald a new era for their long-oppressed community. (AP Photo/Patrick Baz, Pool)
AP - Jan 30 1:42 AM
- Head of the security in Iraq 's Kurdistan, Dana Ahmad Majid, casts his vote at a polling station in the northern Kurdish city of Suleimaniya, Sunday Jan. 30, 2005. Iraqi Kurds flocked to polling stations in northern Iraq to take part in elections they hope will herald a new era for their long-oppressed community. (AP Photo/Patrick Baz, Pool)
AP - Jan 30 1:41 AM
- An Iraqi woman raises her arms during a security check outside a polling station in the center of Baghdad, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005 where Iraqis are lining up to vote in their country's first free election in a half-century. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)
AP - Jan 30 1:43 AM
- An Iraqi Army soldier checks a baby as it arrives with his father and brother to a polling station in Baghdad, Iraq , Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005 where Iraqis are lining up to vote in their country's first free election in a half-century. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)
AP - Jan 30 1:30 AM
- Shiite cleric and leader of the key Shiite political organization, the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq , Abdel-Aziz al-Hakim, accompanied by his daughter, far left, casts his vote in the Iraqi elections in Baghdad, Iraq Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)
AP - Jan 30 1:27 AM
TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: iraq; iraqielection
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To: Peach; lysie
Isn't that amazing... 72%?!
Wow! I am so impressed with these people, and the mainstream media, and the dems who oppose this are continuing to look more irrelevant all the time!
Good Morning!
To: dennisw
Thank you for all that work.
To: Northern Yankee
Morning, sweetie. I'm so happy! What wonderful news ... when I fell asleep around 5:00, MSNBC was saying no one was at the polls.
Of course, they didn't mention there were 30,000 polling places in Iraq and they must have been showing the one with light traffic. Hah!
23
posted on
01/30/2005 5:56:31 AM PST
by
Peach
To: kellynla
Obviously from the long walks, long lines and long waits, Jessie Jackson will intervene as there is ample proof there was an attempt to disenfranchise some voters? LOL
No doubt, these brave, determined, people willing to risk their lives, trivializes the whole Democrat whiner bunch.
To: dennisw
Great collection.
The new badge of freedom and
a symbol of defiance against intimidation from
terrorists/insurrectionists
25
posted on
01/30/2005 5:57:11 AM PST
by
TomGuy
(America: Best friend or worst enemy. Choose wisely.)
To: Peach
Mornin' darlin!
How can these journalists, who continue to find fault here, ever look at themselves in the mirror?
Comment #27 Removed by Moderator
To: Peach
Wow, 72%. That's going to leave a mark (on the muggs of the lefist US MSM).
28
posted on
01/30/2005 6:03:41 AM PST
by
DoughtyOne
(US socialist liberalism would be dead without the help of politicians who claim to be conservative.)
To: Northern Yankee
A good question. It is no wonder the media are the least trusted profession on the planet.
NBC is focusing on the negative. I must turn the channel before my smile disappears altogether.
29
posted on
01/30/2005 6:03:43 AM PST
by
Peach
To: dennisw
"These folks could teach a thing or two to the naysayers and malcontents here."
.....here meaning here in the the US of A, not Freerepublic.
Sorry for any misinterpretation.
30
posted on
01/30/2005 6:05:04 AM PST
by
roaddog727
(The marginal propensity to save is 1 minus the marginal propensity to consume.)
To: Sgt_Schultze
I'm not sure it would work in this nation, since the dems always have a brown thumb already.
31
posted on
01/30/2005 6:05:50 AM PST
by
DoughtyOne
(US socialist liberalism would be dead without the help of politicians who claim to be conservative.)
To: dennisw
This one shows how bad these people want to vote.......
Disabled Iraqi man Mohammed Karim Khader, 80, is carried on the back of another man on his way to cast his vote in the northern Kurdish city of Suleimaniya, January 30, 2005.
32
posted on
01/30/2005 6:06:29 AM PST
by
Jackknife
(No man is entitled to the blessings of freedom unless he be vigilant in its preservation.-MacArthur)
To: jakkknife
|
Sun Jan 30, 8:41 AM ET |
|
An elderly crippled Iraqi man waits in line to participate in the country's national elections, outside a polling station in the holy city of Najaf, January 30, 2005. Insurgents threatening an election day bloodbath killed at least 22 people on Sunday in a string of bombings and mortar attacks on polling stations in Iraq (news - web sites)'s first multi-party ballot in half a century. REUTERS/Faleh Kheiber |
|
|
Sun Jan 30, 8:43 AM ET |
|
An Iraqi soldier puts his finger in ink after placing his vote in the ballot box at the polling station in Al Alamara, Iraq (news - web sites), January 30, 2005, as the country holds its first elections. Iraqi officials hope for a turnout of at least 50 percent to lend legitimacy to the outcome. Officials expect preliminary results in six to seven days and final results in about 10 days. REUTERS/James Vellacott/Pool |
|
33
posted on
01/30/2005 6:08:12 AM PST
by
dennisw
(Pryce-Jones: Arab culture is steeped in conspiracy theories, half truths, and nursery rhyme politics)
To: Sgt_Schultze
To: dennisw
Mega thanks for posting these pictures!
What a joyful day it must be for these people.
I am very happy for them.
35
posted on
01/30/2005 6:18:17 AM PST
by
nmh
(Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
To: dennisw
Purple fingers of FREEDOM !
36
posted on
01/30/2005 6:19:20 AM PST
by
Khurkris
(That sound you hear coming from over the horizon...thats me laughing.)
To: dennisw
37
posted on
01/30/2005 6:21:51 AM PST
by
Flavius
("... we should reconnoitre assiduosly... " Vegetius)
To: dennisw
Mr. Gorbachev, take down that wall.
Saddam Hussein, come out of that hole.
38
posted on
01/30/2005 6:31:02 AM PST
by
kitkat
To: dennisw
39
posted on
01/30/2005 6:33:20 AM PST
by
Khurkris
(That sound you hear coming from over the horizon...thats me laughing.)
To: dennisw
Interesting pictures. The Kurds don't seem to mind women and men standing together to vote. Are Kurds muslim?
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