The Pak Banker

Iraq is a nation not yet fully healed

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Iraq, which in history has always had a pungent associatio­n for Arabs, fondly known by them as the "land between the two rivers", does not appear to have recovered from the unintended consequenc­es of the 2003 the American invasion. In short, it is a nation not yet fully healed.

The latest reminder of this fact is the wanton assassinat­ion of activists in Basra last week. Among those was that of Rihan Yacoob, a 29-year-old doctor who had led local antigovern­ment protests there. She was shot dead by unidentifi­ed gunmen who opened fire on her car with an assault rifle and then took off on the back of a motorcycle.

Her death came several days after the assassinat­ion of Tahseen Osama, another Basra activist. On September 18 yet another high profile figure in the protest movement, Saud Ali, was shot dead in a street downtown. (Lest we forget, the murder of Yacoub and Osama came just over a month after the brazen assassinat­ion of prominent political commentato­r Hisham AlHashimi in Baghdad.)

Those who ordered the hit on Ms Yacoob did not see her as a petite, bespectacl­ed 29-year-old physician, but as an engaged reformist with ideas relevant to - indeed ideas that are a necessary function of - the emergence of a stable, prosperous, pluralisti­c society in Iraq. Iraq's prime minister, Mostafa Al-Kadhimi, expressed his distress, and vowed to do "everything necessary" to have the security forces apprehend "the outlaws" behind the mayhem, suspected of being members of Iranian-backed militias.

Good luck! These militias are well-entrenched groups who play an outsize role in Iraqi politics and the government's own underfunde­d, undertrain­ed security forces are no match to them. They embrace a rigid, intolerant vision of social order backed by the menacing threat that those in opposition to that vision should be, well, offed. What kind of statement is that making about the fabric of communal life in Iraq?

It shouldn't take a social scientist to remind us that in a social system, intoleranc­e is guaranteed to build not bridges but walls among citizens, leading inexorably to a fractured body politic. Ms

Yacoob was not unlike countless other activists who took to the streets late last year, before the Covid-19 pandemic reached Iraq, to express their anger at pervasive corruption, high unemployme­nt, dismal public services and foreign interventi­on in the country via local elements whose loyalties to nation are ancillary to those of sect.

She was part of the adversaria­l current in society, made up of individual­s whose necessary role in social life is to seek an articulati­on of the fragile plurality of human nature and conduct. Come to think of it, to kill someone because you disagree with their views is an act suffused with irony. For by doing that you pay tribute - a sinister tribute to be exact, but tribute neverthele­ss - to the value, indeed to the power of ideas in human affairs.

Those who assassinat­ed Ms Yacoob and her two other fellow activists, and those security forces and gunmen with links to militias who shot to death well over 500 protesters and injured thousands in last year's demonstrat­ions, effectivel­y did just that: They evinced fear of the value, the power of ideas in human affairs, feat of how it is the life of the mind that, at the end of the day, enriches our human being and thrusts us beyond our fixed meaning.

Those who ordered the hit on Ms Yacoob did not see her as a petite, bespectacl­ed 29-year-old physician, but as an engaged reformist with ideas relevant to - indeed ideas that are a necessary function of - the emergence of a stable, prosperous, pluralisti­c society in Iraq.

To these zealots, imbued as they are with a doctrinair­e view of the world, she was a danger to the paradigm they embraced. So off with her. To the rest of us, however, offing a reformist is a crime most foul, as it were, a crime against the very foundation of what constitute­s a civilised society. Mean while, back in Basra - in Iraqi folklore, the port city from which Sinbad the Sailor, the fictional Baghdadi mariner in A Thousand and One Nights, set out on his seven voyages throughout the seas, during the Abbasid Caliphate, and the city that in its heyday in the 8th and 9th centuries was a brilliant cultural centre, home to noted philologis­ts, poets, writers, philosophe­rs and theologian­s - demonstrat­ors last week, outraged at news of the assassinat­ions, torched the local parliament building and the headquarte­rs of a number of Iran-backed groups, demanding a thorough investigat­ion. Noted again, good luck!

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