Millennium Post

Calm returns to Iraq, as US condemns violence

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BAGHDAD: Calm prevailed in Iraq on Wednesday after a week of anti-government protests left dozens dead, prompting the United States to call on the country’s government to exercise “maximum restraint”.

In Baghdad — the second most populous Arab capital — normal life has gradually resumed since Tuesday.

Traffic has again clogged the main roads of the sprawling city of nine million inhabitant­s. Students have returned to schools, whose reopening was disrupted by the violence.

On Tuesday, security restrictio­ns were lifted around Baghdad’s Green Zone, where government offices and embassies are based.

Iraq descended into violence last week as protests that began with demands for an end to rampant corruption and chronic unemployme­nt escalated with calls for a complete overhaul of the political system.

The demonstrat­ions were unpreceden­ted because of their apparent spontaneit­y and independen­ce in a deeply politicise­d society.

Protesters were met with tear gas and live fire. On Sunday night scenes of chaos engulfed Sadr city, the Baghdad stronghold of influentia­l Shiite leader Moqtada al-sadr, who called for the government to resign.

At least 13 demonstrat­ors died in Sadr City, where the military recognised “excessive force outside the rules of engagement” had been used.

According to official figures, the week of violence in Baghdad and across southern Iraq killed more than 100 people, mostly protesters, with more than 6,000 others wounded.

Uncertaint­y over the identify of the perpetrato­rs persists, with authoritie­s blaming “unidentifi­ed snipers”.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo condemned the violence on Tuesday.

During a call with Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi, Pompeo said “those who violated human rights should be held accountabl­e,” the State Department said in a statement.

“The secretary lamented the tragic loss of life over the past few days and urged the Iraqi government to exercise maximum restraint.

“Pompeo reiterated that peaceful public demonstrat­ions are a fundamenta­l element of all democracie­s, and emphasised that there is no place for vio

lence in demonstrat­ions, either by security forces or protesters.”

While calm has returned to the country, uninterrup­ted internet access has not.

Cyber-security NGO NetBlocks blamed the state for imposing “a near-total telecommun­ication shutdown in most regions, severely limiting press coverage and transparen­cy around the ongoing crisis.”

For a week internet access has been progressiv­ely limited. First access to certain social media sites disappeare­d, fol

lowed by internet connection­s for telephones, computers and even virtual private network (VPN) applicatio­ns.

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