Muscat Daily

Protester killed in Baghdad, dozens wounded across Iraq

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Baghdad, Iraq - A protester was shot dead on Tuesday in the Iraqi capital and dozens more were wounded across the country’s south, where burning tyres blocked highways and thick black smoke blanketed its restive cities.

The casualties in clashes with security forces were the latest episode of violence in the nearly two month old grassroots movement demanding the total overhaul of Iraq’s political class.

At least 350 people have been killed and around 15,000 wounded since the protests broke out on October 1 in Baghdad and the Shiite-majority south.

The latest victim fell in Baghdad, shot by a rubber bullet near Al Ahrar bridge, which leads to a cluster of government buildings on the west bank of the river Tigris.

Fearing protesters would cross it to storm those offices, security forces have sealed off Al Ahrar and used volleys of tear gas, rubber bullets and live fire to keep crowds back.

Demonstrat­ors - most of them teenagers - throw rocks from behind their own makeshift barricades in daily skirmishes that have transforme­d the historic heart of Baghdad into a flashpoint.

The clashes left another 18 demonstrat­ors wounded near Al Ahrar on Tuesday, according to a medical source. Many of the young men had been there for days or weeks without going home, with one saying, “We won’t leave unless it’s in coffins.”

“Either way, I’ve got no job, no money, so whether I stay here or go home, it’s all the same,” said another.

An Iraqi tricolour tied around his shoulders, he went on bitterly, “I’ll never be able to get married without work or a salary, so I’ve got no family and no home anyway.”

Coloured smoke bombs went off all around them, filling the colonnaded streets with puffs of orange, green and purple.

In the south, it was protesters themselves who were responsibl­e for smoke.

They burned tyres along highways outside the city of Diwaniyah, blockading main bridges and one of the province’s three power stations.

In the city itself, massive crowds marched through the streets, tearing down posters of politician­s and drumming on them with their shoes to insult them.

“It’s been two months, we’re sick of your promises,” they chanted.

Schools and public buildings have been shut in Diwaniyah for the past month by strikes and road closures, but skirmishes with riot police have been rare.

In nearby Hillah, the usually peaceful sit-ins took a violent turn overnight when security forces fired tear gas grenades at protesters, wounding around 60, medics said.

Demonstrat­ors and security forces in Karbala lobbed Molotov cocktails at each another.

Nighttime skirmishes have become routine in the city, but on Tuesday they carried on into midday and live fire could be heard ringing out in the afternoon, a reporter said.

In Dhi Qar, arteries linking key cities and the three oil fields of Garraf, Nasiriyah and Subba were shut. Clashes with police guarding the fields left 13 officers wounded.

The three oil fields together produce around 200,000 of Iraq’s roughly 3.6mn barrels a day. Iraq is ranked OPEC’s second-biggest crude producer and, according to Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, the world’s 12th most corrupt country.

The turmoil has not significan­tly impacted oil production or exports, which fund virtually all of the country’s state budget.

Either way, I’ve got no job, no money, so whether I stay here or go home, it’s all the same

A protester

 ?? (AFP) ?? A youth drives his bicycle through burning tyres in Karbala, south of Baghdad on Tuesday
(AFP) A youth drives his bicycle through burning tyres in Karbala, south of Baghdad on Tuesday

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