Bangkok Post

Iraq demos rage on despite PM pleas

Four days of protests leave 34 people dead

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BAGHDAD: Protesters clashed with riot police yesterday in Iraq despite the premier’s pleas for patience and an internet blackout on the fourth day of mass rallies that have left 34 dead.

Many were awaiting a signal in the midday sermon of Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, Iraq’s highest Shia Muslim authority, that would influence the revolt in the predominan­tly-Shia areas.

Before dawn, Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi appeared in his first televised address since the protests kicked off on Tuesday, asking for more time to implement a reform agenda in a country plagued by corruption and unemployme­nt after decades of conflict.

As the pre-recorded address played on state television, heavy gunfire rang out across Baghdad and two more protesters and one police officer were killed in the south.

By sunrise, security forces were out in force across the capital in a bid to tighten a curfew announced the previous day, blocking off access to the emblematic gathering place of Tahrir (Liberation) Square.

But dozens of protesters amassed in a main thoroughfa­re nearby, descending from trucks and buses wearing masks and carrying Iraqi flags.

“We heard Abdel Mahdi’s speech yesterday. These are promises we’ve been hearing for more than 15 years,” a 32-year-old protester who identified himself as Sayyed.

“They change nothing and they won’t get us off the streets. Either we die or we change the regime,” he said.

Demonstrat­ions over corruption, unemployme­nt and lacking services first broke out in Baghdad and have since spread to the Shia-dominated south, while the northern and western provinces have remained relatively quiet.

They are unpreceden­ted because of their apparent spontaneit­y and independen­ce in a country where rallies are typically called by politician­s or religious figures.

Instead of matching posters or party insignia, protesters have brandished Iraqi flags and banners with uncoordina­ted slogans and hashtags.

‘NO MAGIC SOLUTIONS’

Riot police have unleashed water cannons, tear gas, rubber bullets and live fire to clear the streets of protesters, who amassed despite curfews and an internet blackout across three-quarters of Iraq since Wednesday. The clashes have left a total of 34 people, including four policemen, dead.

But in his speech yesterday, Abdel Mahdi insisted security forces were abiding by “internatio­nal standards” in dealing with protesters and rejected the “politicisa­tion” of protests.

He described the clashes as “the destructio­n of the state, the entire state”, but refrained from directly addressing protesters’ demands.

Instead, the embattled premier broadly defended his government’s achievemen­ts and pledged monthly stipends for families in need, while asking for more time to implement the reform agenda he promised last year.

A major turning point yesterday was expected to be the weekly sermon by Mr Sistani that could either demand protesters clear the streets or add fuel to the fire. The United Nations, European Union and Britain have all appealed for calm, while rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal condemned the response to protests.

“It is outrageous that Iraqi security forces time and again deal with protesters with such brutality using lethal and unnecessar­y force,” said Amnesty’s Lynn Maalouf.

She said the internet blackout was a “draconian measure... to silence protests away from cameras and the world’s eyes”.

 ?? AFP ?? A protester flashes the ‘V for victory’ sign as a riot police vehicle burns behind him in Baghdad’s central Tayeran Square on Thursday.
AFP A protester flashes the ‘V for victory’ sign as a riot police vehicle burns behind him in Baghdad’s central Tayeran Square on Thursday.

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