Bangkok Post

Iraqis shatter decades-old taboos

Protesters wanted to topple the system, but upset old norms instead.

- By Mohamad Ali Harissi

Mocking clerics, falling in love at rallies and mending a broken society: even if Iraq’s young protesters have failed to overthrow entrenched politician­s, they have scored by shattering decadesold taboos. Since October, the country of 40 million has been rocked by a historical­ly large grassroots movement with big goals: ending corruption, unaccounta­ble sectarian parties and overreach from neighbouri­ng Iran.

Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi resigned in December, only to be replaced by ex-minister Mohammad Allawi, slammed by protesters as too close to the ruling elite.

But what they have so far been unable to win politicall­y, demonstrat­ors have made up for with social change.

“We scored one goal by bringing down the government, but socially we achieved much more,” said Ali Khraybit, 28.

His best friend just proposed to a girl he met marching in Baghdad’s Tahrir Square, the anti-government movement’s epicentre.

Like other squares across Iraq’s mainly-Shia south, Tahrir has become a social experiment, a free space where conservati­ve norms have been toppled.

Youth chant against a once-untouchabl­e cluster of politician­s and paramilita­ry commanders, and women spend nights in tents next to adult men.

Students defy orders to return to class and neighbourh­oods once seen as dangerous are buzzing with people en route to demonstrat­e.

Slogans such as “Forget outdated traditions”, “End classism” and “No more difference­s” are trending on Twitter in Iraq.

“Tahrir lets us dream,” wrote one activist whose friend — who ekes out a living driving a rickshaw — had fallen in love with a medic from a prestigiou­s family.

Since the 1970s, Iraq has endured Saddam Hussein’s authoritar­ian regime, back-to-back wars and devastatin­g sanctions that isolated it from the world.

There were few cellular phones and barely any internet access until the 2003 US-led invasion that collapsed Saddam’s nominally secular regime.

Sectarian fighting gave rise to hardline Shia and Sunni militias as society became more divided and religious.

When Iraq defeated the Islamic State group in 2017 after years of fighting and displaceme­nt, many anticipate­d long-overdue peace and prosperity.

“The young generation was in a coma for many years, but stability opened their eyes to the truth: there is more to life than just surviving,” said protester Ahmad Haddad, 32.

“There’s living in dignity in a civil society, breaking conservati­ve norms and loosening the grip of religious parties,” Mr Haddad said.

But instead of easing into normality, it was a sudden uprising that transforme­d Iraq.

Hiyyam Shayea, a 50-year-old teacher in protest-hit Diwaniyah province, can testify to that.

“There were some huge, surprising changes to a lot of social affairs,” said Ms Shayea, wearing a traditiona­l black robe at a recent rally in her hometown.

Such a stance had long been unimaginab­le in the south, where tribal customs trump federal law and restrict women’s public role.

But it has come at a high price. Around 550 people have been killed and 30,000 wounded in protest-related violence.

“That was all for a homeland — one that’s civilised and civil, not backwards and outdated,” Ms Shayea said.

Some are resisting the changes, describing rallies as hotbeds of promiscuit­y, alcohol and drugs, fuelled by the West.

Leading Iraqi cleric Moqtada Sadr has tried to discredit the movement with such claims, insisting men and women stay separate and protests be “cleaned”.

Women swiftly organised their own rally mocking Sadr, long untouchabl­e because of his violent past as a militiaman and his diehard followers.

In the protests’ early days, angry crowds slapped shoes against portraits of paramilita­ry leaders and Iranian general Qasem Soleimani, who held tremendous sway in Baghdad and was never publicly criticised.

Soleimani was later killed in a US strike. Demonstrat­ors also railed against “muhassassa,” the sectarian power-sharing system governing Iraq after Saddam.

Few current protesters are old enough to remember Saddam — 60 percent of the population is under 25 — and blame their elders for Iraq’s slide into broken politics.

The rallies exposed “a huge rift” between the two generation­s, Iraqi researcher Khaled Hamza told AFP.

“We’re in the middle of a spontaneou­s movement by a group of youth who weren’t expected to be responsibl­e for achieving what our generation couldn’t,” said Mr Hamza, who is in his 60s.

Protesters recognise it, too. In Baghdad, a woman in a pink headscarf carried a sign: “In the end, I made a revolution. What did you do?”

Further south in oil-rich Basra, Heba, a protester in her 20s, said the rallies have changed her. “They strengthen­ed our personalit­ies, made us distinguis­h between right and wrong and demand our rights,” she said.

The movement is now at a crossroads: numbers have dwindled as activists face an intimidati­on campaign and parties seek to recapture momentum with a new cabinet.

“Now, it’s time to unite under a new vision, a plan that addresses Iraqis’ needs,” said protester Mohammad al-Ajeel.

“What’s happening is huge, but it’s new for us. We can’t expect everything to happen overnight,” said Mr Ajeel, a businessma­n living between Iraq and the UAE.

“It may need years.”

 ??  ?? CELLPHONE WARRIORS: Iraqi protesters stand in the smoke of burning tires during an anti-government demonstrat­ion near the government building in the southern Iraqi city of Basra last month.
CELLPHONE WARRIORS: Iraqi protesters stand in the smoke of burning tires during an anti-government demonstrat­ion near the government building in the southern Iraqi city of Basra last month.

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