Bangkok Post

Protests held near Green Zone

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BAGHDAD: Thousands of protesters massed near the high-security Green Zone in Iraq’s capital yesterday in a resumption of anti-government demonstrat­ions that left more than 150 people dead earlier this month.

They are expected to balloon further with the full endorsemen­t of populist cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, whose supporters have in previous years breached the Green Zone hosting government offices and foreign embassies.

Protests first erupted on October 1 to demand an end to widespread corruption, unemployme­nt and an overhaul of the political class.

Activists called for the resumption yesterday, which marks a year since Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi came to power and the deadline set by the country’s top Shiite authority for him to enact desired reforms.

One in five people lives in poverty in Iraq and youth unemployme­nt sits around 25%, according to the World Bank.

The rates are staggering for Opec’s second-biggest oil producer, which Transparen­cy Internatio­nal ranks as the 12th most corrupt state in the world.

“I want my share of the oil!” one protester said yesterday morning in the capital’s iconic Tahrir (Liberation) Square.

Hundreds had gathered there starting on Thursday night, carrying Iraq’s tricolour flag and calling for the entrenched political class to be “uprooted”.

The first signal of how the highlyanti­cipated day could develop will be the weekly noontime sermon issued by Iraq’s highest Shiite authority, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.

But the real test will be the afternoon, when protests typically pick up and when many are expecting supporters of Sadr — an influentia­l ex-militiaman who controls the largest parliament­ary bloc — to hit the streets.

“We’re not hungry — we want dignity!” a protester shouted in Baghdad, while a third lashed out at “the so-called representa­tives of the people who have monopolise­d all the resources”.

Overnight, a few dozen protesters headed towards the Green Zone, but were pushed back by security forces using water cannons.

Other rallies started in the southern cities of Diwaniyah and Nasiriyah, where demonstrat­ors said they would remain in the streets “until the regime falls”.

The movement is unpreceden­ted in recent Iraqi history both because of its spontaneit­y and independen­ce, and because of the brutal violence with which a torrent of protests on October 1-6 was met.

At least 157 people were killed, according to a government probe published on Tuesday, which acknowledg­ed that “excessive force” was used.

A vast majority of them were protesters in Baghdad, with 70% shot in the head or chest.

In response, Abdel Mahdi issued a list of measures meant to ease public anger, including hiring drives and higher pensions for the families of protesters who died.

The beleaguere­d premier defended his reform agenda in a scheduled televised appearance early yesterday, telling watchers it was their “right” to demonstrat­e as long as they did not “disturb public life”.

But in an unusually critical tone, he complained that previous government­s had not faced the same level of scrutiny and said political figures demanding “reform” had themselves failed to enact it.

Abdel Mahdi’s comments appeared to be a reference to Sadr, whose parliament­ary bloc calls itself the “Alliance towards Reform”.

He called on the government to resign in early October but this week much more emphatical­ly backed the protests, giving his supporters the green light to join them.

Sadr has instructed members of his own paramilita­ry force to be on “high alert”, and they could be seen in parts of Baghdad yesterday in a clear show of force.

Others backed the government and called the protests a “conspiracy”, including the powerful Hashed alShaabi militia whose political branch is the second-largest parliament­ary bloc.

Iraq has been ravaged by decades of conflict that finally calmed in 2017 with a declared victory over the Islamic State group.

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