Muscat Daily

6 protesters killed in south Iraq as unrest intensifie­s

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Nasiriyah, Iraq - Six protesters were killed on Sunday in Iraq’s south, where resurging anti-government demonstrat­ions turned up the heat on paralysed politician­s facing the country’s largest grassroots movement in decades.

Three demonstrat­ors were killed and around 50 wounded in clashes with security forces near the key southern port of Umm Qasr, the Iraqi Human Rights Commission reported.

A correspond­ent said security forces had fired live rounds at protesters trying to block access to the port.

Since October 1, Iraq’s capital and majority-Shiite south have been swept by mass demonstrat­ions over corruption, lack of jobs and poor services that have escalated into calls for an overhaul of the ruling system.

Top leaders have publicly acknowledg­ed the demands as legitimate and promised measures to appease protesters, including hiring drives, electoral reform and a Cabinet reshuffle.

But the rallies have continued, waning on some days but swelling when demonstrat­ors felt politician­s were stalling.

On Sunday, protesters in the southern city of Nasiriyah blockaded five main bridges, shut down schools and burned tyres outside public offices in anger.

They blocked access to oil fields and companies around the city, torching as well its Shiite endowment centre, a government body that manages religious sites.

Medical sources said overnight three protesters had been shot dead and at least 47 others wounded by security forces in the city, some 300km south of the capital Baghdad.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Smoke billows from burning tyres during a protest in Nasiriyah, the capital of Iraq’s southern province of Dhi Qar on Sunday
(AFP) Smoke billows from burning tyres during a protest in Nasiriyah, the capital of Iraq’s southern province of Dhi Qar on Sunday

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