by the way it is very nice that christans vote for Kurdistan ! we kurds have proven that we are a peacefull nation , and we can make good realtion with others if they dont want to be oppresive to us.
thanks diri for posting that update.



dyaoko wrote:Shitty Kurdsat and Kurdistan TV sites, they are not working...
roj tv is the only tv which I can watch online.
they showed hakim's fans in a large protest...as they were going to war ... with a lot of enthousasim.
but there was not enthousiastic picture from kurdistan. too bad...as I had presidcted...


Rumtaya wrote:She is Traitor because instead of voting for her own nations parties she go vots for Kurdish List but thats normal for our Catholic Assyrians.




kardox wrote:i watch kurdistan tv online all the time and it is clear as a crystal, ur computer and connection is shitty and ur langauge.dyaoko wrote:Shitty Kurdsat and Kurdistan TV sites, they are not working...
roj tv is the only tv which I can watch online.
they showed hakim's fans in a large protest...as they were going to war ... with a lot of enthousasim.
but there was not enthousiastic picture from kurdistan. too bad...as I had presidcted...










Iraqi Shiites lead poll in south, Kurds in north
BAGHDAD, Dec 16 (AFP) - The Shiite religious coalition is leading in the polls in Iraq's five southern provinces, while the Kurdish Alliance looks set to triumph in the north, electoral and party sources said Friday after millions of Iraqis voted in elections.
The strong results for the conservative Shiite United Iraqi Alliance were expected in southern Iraq. However, the UIA might face stiffer competition in urban areas like Baghdad from secular former premier Ilyad Allawi, whose list often scored second in Shiite regions.
In Karbala province, the UIA may have marked its highest score, at 85 percent, according to a source close to the independent electoral commission but not confirmed by the body.
The UIA includes religious parties like the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution (SCIRI) and Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari's Dawa party.
In Babel province, 70 percent of the electorate went for the UIA, with Allawi managing to snatch 17 percent, according to the election commission.
In the Kurdish north, the Kurdish alliance, pairing the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP), perpetuated its total dominance of the autonomous region's politics.
In Arbil, the alliance took 86 percent of the votes while the Kurdish Islamic Party, took only 3.4 percent, according to a PUK official. In Dohuk, the alliance took 76 percent while the tally for Suleimaniya was 71 percent.
More than two-thirds of Iraqi voters turned out nationwide in the country's landmark election, according to first estimates Friday, but final results were not expected for at least two weeks.
An international monitoring mission said the election had "generally" met international standards, and hailed the organisers for meeting a "difficult challenge."
Elsewhere, voters were thought to give strong local backing to parties or coalitions based on Sunni, Turkmen and Christian leanings.










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