Albuquerque Journal

Iraqi leaders give in to protesters

Prime minister agrees to resign

- BLOOMBERG NEWS

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Iraq’s president said Thursday that Prime Minister Adel AbdulMahdi had agreed to resign once a successor is found and vowed to move toward new elections after days of violent protests between anti-government demonstrat­ors and security forces left at least 200 people dead.

In a televised speech, President Barham Salih said he would present a draft electoral law next week for an early parliament­ary ballot, and vowed to crack down on corruption, one of the key demands of protesters.

Salih said the premier had requested political blocs to agree on a replacemen­t before stepping aside, signaling a possibly prolonged period of horse-trading between antagonist­ic parties across a sectarian divide.

The protests in Iraq, along with sustained rallies that removed the prime minister of Lebanon, pose a particular challenge to Iran, which will want to protect the significan­t political power it wields in both countries.

The unrest was the biggest test of Abdul-Mahdi’s short premiershi­p, with 250 people killed, according to a count by The Associated Press, and thousands wounded in clashes in Baghdad and other cities after taking to the streets angered over unemployme­nt, government corruption and a lack of basic services.

While similar grievances have repeatedly led to bouts of unrest, particular­ly in the south, the latest flare-up was deadlier and more widespread. The government responded by firing tear gas and live ammunition, blocking the internet, imposing a curfew and closing the Iranian border shortly before a major pilgrimage to the Shiite Muslim shrines at Najaf and Karbala.

Abdul-Mahdi, a former finance minister, was picked by rival Shiite Muslim groups as a consensus candidate following parliament­ary elections in 2018, but has struggled to form a strong government and start the nation’s recovery from a devastatin­g war with Islamic State jihadists.

He vowed earlier this week to create jobs for university graduates and said all contracts with foreign companies would stipulate that 50% of jobs should go to Iraqis. The pledges were not enough to calm protesters, and he was criticized by Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Iraq’s most influentia­l Shiite cleric.

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