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Kumaran Ahmad, 31, St Leonards, East Sussex
"I did not know whether we are allowed to vote or not," says Kumaran, a hotel worker.
"I would be prepared to go to London to do this, but it's the first I have heard of this," he says.
"All my friends don't know about it either. We don't have communications here - we feel cut off.
"We don't believe in this election and the idea that it will be free and fair.
"I don't think it would be that expensive to go to London - but to miss work would not be worth it.
"I think the election is just the US choosing who they want."
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Dr Hamid Al-bayati, London representative of Sciri
"I think there's an enthusiasm about the election," says Mr Abayati of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq - one of the two main Shia parties.
"The Iraqi people have been deprived of this for a long time," he says.
"People are talking about it in London, Leeds, Manchester - even those who were born in the UK.
"There will always be difficulties," he says of the need for people to travel to one of three centres.
"But I think the majority of people will get out and vote and they are very enthusiastic about this."
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