Bangkok Post

Nationwide rallies erupt as crisis deepens

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BAGHDAD: Anti-government protesters packed into the Iraqi capital’s Tahrir Square late on Tuesday in the largest numbers yet as the political crisis sparked by their demonstrat­ions deepened further.

Late into the night, blaring horns, fireworks and loud Iraqi music filled the plaza, the capital’s focal point for demonstrat­ions over unemployme­nt and corruption that have escalated into calls for the government to quit.

The rallies have swelled in recent days, defying curfews, threats of arrest and violence that has left 242 people dead and more than 8,000 wounded this month.

“We’ve started fighting over who can kick back the tear gas canister first,” said Youssef, a 33-year-old who was spending his sixth straight night in the square.

“They won’t be able to suppress these protests.”

Security forces have fired volleys of tear gas at crowds massing on a key bridge linking Tahrir Square to the Green Zone, which hosts government offices and foreign embassies.

The chaotic protest movement is unpreceden­ted in Iraq, both because of its apparently independen­t nature and the ensuing violence.

The first burst of protests starting Oct 1 left 157 people dead, mostly protesters in Baghdad. At least 83 more have died in a second wave starting last Thursday.

They included at least one protester killed overnight in the Shia holy city of Karbala, according to the Iraqi Human Rights Commission.

The Karbala violence has sparked condemnati­ons from Amnesty Internatio­nal, who said “excessive and often lethal force” was used against protesters “in a reckless and utterly unlawful manner”.

Thus far, the government’s reform proposals — hiring drives, anti-corruption campaigns and more social safety nets — have failed to appease protesters.

Their demands have been championed by Moqtada Sadr, a Shia religious leader and ex-militiaman with a cultlike following in parts of Iraq.

But Mr Sadr himself is one of the current government’s two main sponsors, after his Saeroon bloc won the largest share of parliament’s 329 seats in a vote last year.

On Tuesday, he returned to his native Najaf, a holy city in southern Iraq, shortly after airport sources said he had landed from neighbouri­ng Iran.

In a surprise move, he then invited rival Hadi al-Ameri, who leads the second-largest parliament­ary bloc Fatah, to secure the votes needed for snap elections.

Hours earlier, Prime Minister Adil Abdel-Mahdi had sent an open letter to Mr Sadr dismissing his calls for the premier to resign and challengin­g him to find a political solution.

“If the goal of elections is to change the government, then there is a shorter way: for you to agree with Mr Ameri to form a new government,” Mr AbdelMahdi wrote.

That government could then begin work within “days, if not hours,” said the premier.

Later, Mr Sadr shot back: “I thought asking you to call for early elections was a way to preserve your dignity.”

“But if you refuse, I call on Hadi alAmeri to work together to withdraw [parliament’s] confidence from you immediatel­y,” he wrote on Twitter. That would necessitat­e early polls. Mr Sadr and Mr Ameri formed a strained alliance to bring Mr AbdelMahdi to power last year, but have found themselves on opposite sides of this month’s protests.

Fatah is the political arm of the Hashed al-Shaabi paramilita­ry force, which has publicly backed the government.

The protests recently received a new push by Iraq’s younger generation, with students and school children streaming into the streets despite orders to return to class.

Trade unions representi­ng teachers, lawyers and dentists have all declared strikes lasting several days.

About 60% of Iraq’s 40-million population is under the age of 25.

But youth unemployme­nt stands at 25%, while one-in-five live below the poverty line, despite its vast oil wealth.

 ?? AFP ?? Protesters wave flags as they gather during a demonstrat­ion outside the local government headquarte­rs in Basra.
AFP Protesters wave flags as they gather during a demonstrat­ion outside the local government headquarte­rs in Basra.

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