Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Iowa: Int'l students watch campaign with interest

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Iowa: Int'l students watch campaign with interest

    Daily Iowan , IA
    Oct 18 2004

    Int'l students watch campaign with interest
    By Arna Wilkinson - The Daily Iowan


    Ferzan Akalin, a UI graduate student and one-year Iowa City resident,
    has been watching the presidential debates and is leaning toward Sen.
    John Kerry. She is adamant about voting in her native Turkey, but she
    is not able to vote in the United States.

    Although they will not cast a ballot, Akalin and other UI
    international students are following the presidential race closely,
    concerned with how the outcome will affect their countries.

    "George Bush didn't care about cooperating with his allies, and
    that's why he's getting lots of reactions from other countries and
    people," Akalin said. "The next president should be working harder to
    have better relationships with his neighbors."

    Yet, Akalin said, a Turkish newspaper had reported Kerry as
    supporting the recognition of genocide against Armenians by Turkey
    during World War I. Preceded by decades of conflict between the
    Ottoman Empire and Armenians, approximately 1.75 million Armenians in
    Turkey were deported by the government, resulting in 600,000 deaths.
    Armenians contend it was genocide, a charge the Turkish government
    disputes.

    "The candidates promise a lot of things for votes, but this should
    not be an issue," Akalin said.

    Evans Ochola, a UI graduate student from Kenya who has lived in Iowa
    City for four years, said he would not vote in the U.S. elections if
    he could, despite an interest in politics.

    "I think that voting should be left for citizens - people that are
    citizens should vote," he said. "I would not want to dilute the
    process."

    What amazes him most, he said, is the fairness of the debates.

    "No one is being taken to jail. Both sides can say what they want
    without anyone victimizing them," he said. "You don't see that in
    most African countries."

    Even with a recent peaceful election in Kenya, Ochola said, he would
    welcome presidential debates in his country's election process,
    adding they can indicate candidates' personalities and intellects.

    UI graduate student Prem Ramakrishnan, a four-year U.S. resident,
    said everyone in his native India is watching American politics.

    "We do follow American politics because our kin are here. If
    something goes wrong here, it will affect the others" in India, he
    said, adding he was concerned about the fluctuating number of work
    permits offered by the U.S. government, along with the war in Iraq.

    Ramakrishnan, who watches CNN and reads Indian newspapers, said
    American and Indian campaigns are different because of ethnic
    diversity in India, where more than 14 different constitutionally
    recognized languages are spoken in 28 states and six union
    territories.

    "I like the [American} system; it looks orderly, I can follow it
    easily," said Ramakrishnan. "The majority of the issues are the same,
    but there are difficulties because of different languages and
    ethnicities."
Working...
X