New York Daily News

Killed in Iraq mayhem

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Iraqi security officials say at least 23 people have been killed in protests in Baghdad and across provinces in the country’s Shiite-dominated south.

The officials say the dead include eight protesters who were killed in Baghdad. The remaining deaths were distribute­d across the provinces of Basra, Nasiriyah, Misan and Muthanna in southern Iraq.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulation­s.

Most of the deaths occurred as a result of tear gas canisters that were fired directly at protesters, as well as rubber bullets and live ammunition.

The confrontat­ions began early in the morning after anti-government demonstrat­ions resumed, following a three-week hiatus. The protests began Oct. 1 over corruption, unemployme­nt and lack of basic services but quickly turned deadly as security forces cracked down, using live ammunition for days.

The protests then spread to several, mainly Shiitepopu­lated southern provinces and authoritie­s imposed a curfew and shut down the internet in an effort to quell the unrest.

After a week of violence in the capital and the country’s southern provinces, a government-appointed inquiry into the protests determined that security forces had used excessive force, killing 149 people and wounding over 3,000. It also recommende­d the firing of security chiefs in Baghdad and the south. Eight members of the security forces were also killed.

The protests are similar to those that have engulfed Lebanon in recent days in that they are economical­lydriven, largely leaderless and spontaneou­s against a sectarian-based system and a corrupt political class that has ruled for decades and driven the two countries to the brink of economic disaster.

The protests in Iraq threaten to plunge the country into a new cycle of instabilit­y that potentiall­y could be the most dangerous this conflict-scarred nation has faced, barely two years after declaring victory over the Islamic State.

“They (leaders) have eaten away at the country like cancer,” said Abu Ali alMajidi, 55. “They are all corrupt thieves,” he added.

Thousands of people began converging on Baghdad’s central Tahrir Square as of early Friday, carrying Iraqi flags and posters calling for change and reform.

However, after thousands of protesters removed metal security barriers and crossed the Jumhuriyya Bridge leading to Baghdad’s heavily fortified Green Zone, home to the U.S. Embassy and Iraqi government offices, soldiers fired tear gas to disperse them. After they tried to remove concrete barriers near the entrance of the Green Zone, they fired live rounds to push the protesters back.

“Baghdad hurra hurra, fasad barra barra!” the demonstrat­ors chanted, Arabic for “Baghdad is free, corruption is out.”

Riot police and armed soldiers lined the bridge.

Ambulances zipped back and forth, ferrying the injured to hospitals. A reporter for Iraq’s Sumariyya TV channel was among the injured.

Protests spread to the southern provinces later Friday, including the flashpoint city of Basra where some 4,000 people gathered near the provincial government building.

The current round of protests has been endorsed by Iraq’s nationalis­t Shiite cleric, Muqtada al-Sadr, who has a popular Shiite support base and the largest number of seats in parliament. He has called on the government to resign and suspended his bloc’s participat­ion in the government until it comes up with a reform program.

However, powerful Iranbacked Shiite militias have stood by the government and suggested the demonstrat­ions were a “conspiracy” from the outside.

Iraq’s most senior Shiite spiritual leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, appealed to the protesters and security forces to avoid violence and urged the demonstrat­ors to abstain from attacking security forces or public property.

In his Friday prayers sermon, he also criticized the government-appointed committee investigat­ing the crackdown in the previous protests, saying it did not achieve its goals or uncover who was behind the violence.

As in the protests earlier this month, the protesters, organized on social media, started from the central Tahrir Square. The demonstrat­ors, mostly young, unemployed men, carried Iraqi flags and chanted anti-government protests, demanding jobs, water and electricit­y.

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