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The BBC's Quentin Sommerville in Baghdad: "The capital is in lockdown"
There is heavy security across Iraq as the country votes in its first parliamentary elections since US troops withdrew three years ago.
Polling began at 07:00 local time (04:00 GMT) and closes at 18:00.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is hoping to win a third term in office amid a growing insurgency in the west of the country.
Iraq is experiencing its worst unrest since 2008, with 160 people killed in the past week alone.
Some 22 million Iraqis are registered to vote, with almost 50,000 polling stations open across the country.
The BBC's Quentin Sommerville in Baghdad says the streets of the capital are almost empty because it is in lockdown.
Analysis
Iraq's government sees its ability to conduct these elections successfully as a test of the credibility of democracy here and of the ability of the security forces to deliver enough safety to get the vote out.
In Baghdad that means a huge security operation, with the airport and main highways in and out of the capital closed. There's so little traffic that birdsong can be heard in the city centre and children are playing football on main roads.
In the capital - so far - it's working. We have no reports of fatalities in Baghdad at 13:00 local time. There have been deaths elsewhere but people are coming out to vote. In what quantities we can't yet judge.
He says that many of the voters will have to go on foot - the authorities have banned cars for the day in an effort to stop suicide attacks and car bombers.
Some voters face multiple searches before being allowed into polling stations.
The first incidence of violence reported on Wednesday was in the town of Dibis, near Kirkuk in the north, where police said a roadside bomb had killed two women walking to a polling station.
Wave of attacksWhile it is difficult to predict the outcome of the poll, Mr Maliki is still expected to be a pivotal figure in the coalition-building process which will follow the election.
His State of Law alliance, a Shia coalition, has largely avoided the fragmentation seen by other political blocs since the last election.
Our correspondent says that a result should not be expected any time soon. It took nearly 10 months to assemble a government after the last election, he says, and it is likely to take quite a lot of horse trading this time.
There were some queues reported at Baghdad polling stations early on, although the voting appeared to slow later in the morning.
At the scene
Unlike in the rest of Iraq, the election campaign here has not been badly marred by violence. The Kurdish region has been enjoying an unprecedented degree of self rule, stability and economic prosperity since the fall of Saddam Hussein.
But it is not all rosy. Kurdish parties failed to form a government after last September's regional elections, from which no single party emerged as an outright winner.
For the Kurds these national elections will be another chance to assert their role in the politics of Iraq. As two voters in traditional Kurdish clothing cast their ballots early in the morning, they told me they were voting for a democratic and federal Iraq. For them that means significant representation for the Kurds in the central government and recognition for the distinct Kurdish identity.
Baghdad voter Essam Shukr, whose son died in a suicide bombing last month, told Associated Press: "We want a better life for our sons and grandchildren who cannot even go to playing areas or amusement parks because of the bad security situation. We want a better life for all Iraqis."
Abu Ashraf, who voted in west Baghdad, told Agence France-Presse: "It is necessary to change most of the politicians because they have done nothing, and they spend years on private conflicts."
The campaign has so far been a violent one, with 50 people killed on Monday when soldiers, police and overseas citizens cast their votes.
One bomb struck a Kurdish political rally in the town Khanaqin, killing 30 people and wounding at least 50 others.
On Friday, at least 31 people were killed as a series of blasts targeted a Shia election rally in Baghdad. The Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant - an al-Qaeda offshoot - said it had carried out the attacks.
However, the BBC's Rafid Jaboori says he has travelled to various places in Iraq over the past few days and people have been telling him the violence will not put them off voting, particularly in the Shia heartland of the south and the autonomous Kurdistan region.
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What you need to know about the election - in 60 seconds
More than 9,000 candidates are competing for 328 parliamentary seats.
There will be no voting in parts of Sunni-dominated Anbar province, where security forces still battle Islamist and tribal militants for control of the provincial capital Ramadi and nearby Falluja.
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