Decision on Overseas Voting
Kurds living abroad have voiced concern over a decision by Iraq’s Independent High Election Commission (IHEC) to bar Iraqi citizens living abroad from participating in the upcoming parliamentary elections, calling it a violation of their constitutional rights
Sarhad Ghafouri, head of the sixth branch of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) in Europe, told Kurdistan24 that despite having renewed their biometric registration and holding valid voting cards, Kurds in the diaspora have been denied the right to cast their ballots.
“Although Kurds in the diaspora have valid biometric cards, the commission has deprived them of the right to vote,” Ghafouri said. “We have decided to return. Hundreds of other Kurds abroad are on their way back to Kurdistan to vote.”
He explained that KDP branches abroad are organizing efforts to support the electoral process and the KDP’s List, which aims to defend the rights of the Kurdish people in Baghdad — rights he said “have been increasingly undermined by the federal government.”
Ghafouri also criticized IHEC’s decision not to set up ballot boxes abroad, calling it a clear breach of electoral law. “It is the second election, ballot boxes will not be placed abroad, which is against the law guaranteeing every Iraqi the right to vote and exercise their personal rights,” he said. “The commission knows that the Kurdish nation is wise and capable of defending its constitutional rights through parliament, which is why it has deprived us of this right.”
He noted that in previous elections, Kurds consistently participated in large numbers across European countries, where the Kurdistan Democratic Party received the majority of votes among Kurdish parties.
“The KDP has always earned the highest number of votes in Europe,” Ghafouri said, emphasizing the party’s strong support among the Kurdish diaspora.
IHEC announced in September that voting for the upcoming parliamentary elections will take place exclusively within Iraq, with no polling stations set up abroad. However, Iraqis living abroad who possess valid voting cards will still be able to return home to cast their ballots in their respective provinces.
IHEC spokesperson Jumana al-Ghalai said that, as in the previous parliamentary election, ballot boxes will not be placed outside the country. This marks the second consecutive election cycle in which voting for Iraq’s Council of Representatives is confined to domestic polling stations.
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