The National - News

BASRA DEMONSTRAT­ORS ACCUSE MILITIAS BACKED BY IRAN OF VIOLENT INTIMIDATI­ON

▶ Activists in southern Iraq say they were kidnapped, beaten and tortured for protesting against poor public services

-

Hajar Youssif, 24, was flicking through her Instagram account on her daily commute to work when she looked up to find herself in an unusual location.

The taxi driver had turned into an alley. When she questioned the driver, he sped up.

“I started to feel uneasy and knew that something bad was going to happen,” said the office administra­tor, who took part in protests about the lack of clean water, frequent power cuts and unemployme­nt in her home town of Basra, Iraq’s oil capital and main port.

She shouted and tried to open the door but the driver had locked it. The taxi swerved into a courtyard where three masked men were waiting.

“They immediatel­y told me, ‘We’ll teach you a lesson. Let it be a warning to other protesters’,” Ms Youssif said.

The men slapped and beat her and pulled off her headscarf, she said.

“They grabbed me by my hair and warned me not to take part in the protests, before blindfoldi­ng me and dumping me on the streets,” Ms Youssif said.

Her cheeks were still bruised days after the attack, which she believes was part of what she and other activists describe as a campaign of intimidati­on and arbitrary detentions by powerful Iran-backed militias and political groups.

These groups control Basra, a city of more than two million people in southern Iraq’s Shiite heartland. Residents have repeatedly taken to the streets in recent weeks to protest against failing government services, including water contaminat­ion that sent thousands to hospital.

This month, the protests turned violent when demonstrat­ors attacked and torched government offices, the headquarte­rs of the Iran-backed militias and Iran’s consulate in Basra in a show of anger over what many residents perceive as Tehran’s control over local affairs.

The events in Basra reflect the growing influence of the militias, which played an important role in retaking Iraqi territory from ISIS.

Shortly after the extremists captured much of northern and western Iraq in 2014, tens of thousands of Shiite men answered a call to arms by top Shiite cleric Ayatollah Ali Al Sistani.

Many were members of Iranbacked militias active since the 2003 US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein, while others formed new groups.

During the war against ISIS, the militiamen were also accused by Sunnis and rights groups of abuses against the Sunni community, including murder, torture and the destructio­n of homes.

Buoyed by victory against ISIS, some of the most-feared militias took part in the May national elections and their list – Fatah – won 48 seats in the 329-seat parliament.

Fatah and other factions formed a wider Iran-backed coalition in parliament this month and will probably be given the task of forming a new government.

In Basra, some alleged the militias were working with the local authoritie­s to quell the protests – a charge denied by Bassem Al Khafaji, head of Sayyed Al Shuhada, one of the local militias.

Mr Al Khafaji said the threats against protesters were “individual acts”, not the result of a central directive.

“Our order for all the factions in Basra is not to confront the protesters who burnt down the offices of the militias,” Mr Al Khafaji said.

He said the militias were trying to prevent more bloodshed and blamed infiltrato­rs for turning the protests violent.

Some militia leaders in Basra accused protesters of colluding with the US, which has long worked to curb Iranian influence in Iraq.

A local leader of a prominent militia vowed to retaliate.

“We have pictures of those who burnt down our headquarte­rs and they will pay dearly,” he said. “We will not let them attack us again and if they do, we’ll open fire. That’s what we’ve agreed on, all of us.”

The government said protesters’ demands were legitimate and that infiltrato­rs were behind the violence.

A senior official in the Interior Ministry’s intelligen­ce service said dozens of people were arrested since the protests began.

He admitted that others might be held by political parties and their militias but said his office had no way of tracking that.

Activist Naqeeb Al Luaibi said he had been able to track only 30 protesters detained by the security agencies. Of those, 19 were freed and 11 remained under arrest. Mr Al Luaibi said he believed dozens of others were still being held.

Mahdi Hassan, 26, said he was arrested by the security forces in early August. He was handcuffed, blindfolde­d and held in a room with 33 other protesters.

During three days of interrogat­ion, Mr Hassan said he was slapped and his feet and back struck with a cable. He was also hung by the arms from the ceiling. He was then transferre­d to two other lockups, each holding several dozen protesters.

When they released him after six days, they told him to not join protests “or you won’t see the sun”, Mr Hassan said.

Two other activists, Ahmed Al Wihaili and Sara Talib, both 23, said they were threatened.

Mr Al Wihaili said an anonymous caller warned him that “you only cost us the price of a bullet”. Ms Talib said she came home one day to find her door open and her belongings strewn across the floor.

During one protest, someone approached her and told her to go home because she was putting her life in danger.

Ms Youssif said the beating left her shaken but she would not be deterred.

“I’m taking to the streets for the sake of my town Basra, to get public services and to get rid of those militias and political parties,” she said. “I’m not afraid of them.”

 ?? AP ?? Activist Hajar Youssif has told of her treatment at the hands of militias in Basra, Iraq
AP Activist Hajar Youssif has told of her treatment at the hands of militias in Basra, Iraq

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates