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At least 40 killed as fresh protests engulf Iraq

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At least 40 killed as fresh protests engulf Iraq

Ahmed Aboulenein

OCTOBER 25, 2019

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - At least 40 protesters were killed in Iraq on Friday when security forces used tear gas and an Iranian-backed militia opened fire to try to quell renewed demonstrations against corruption and economic hardship, security sources said.

A government intelligence officer and a member of the powerful Asaib Ahl al-Haq militia were killed in a clash with protesters in the southern city of Amara, police sources said.

More than 2,000 people were injured nationwide, according to medical sources and the Iraqi High Commission on Human Rights (IHCHR), as demonstrators vented frustration at political elites they say have failed to improve their lives after years of conflict.

“All we want are four things: jobs, water, electricity, and safety. That’s all we want,” said 16-year-old Ali Mohammed who had covered his face with a T-shirt to avoid inhaling tear gas, as chaotic scenes overwhelmed Baghdad’s central Tahrir Square.

Sirens wailed and tear gas canisters landed amid groups of young protesters draped in Iraqi flags and chanting “with life and blood we defend you Iraq.”

The bloodshed is the second major bout of violence this month. A series of clashes two weeks ago between protesters and security forces left 157 people dead and over 6,000 wounded.

The unrest has broken nearly two years of relative stability in Iraq, which lived through foreign occupation, civil war and an Islamic State (IS) insurgency between 2003 and 2017. It is the biggest challenge to security since IS was declared beaten.

On Friday, eight protesters were killed in Baghdad, the IHCHR said. At least five of them were protesters struck by tear gas canisters, security sources said.

In the south, at least nine protesters were killed when members of the Iranian-backed Asaib Ahl al-Haq (AAH) militia opened fire on protesters who tried to set fire to the group’s office in the city of Nasiriya, according to security sources.

Eight people were killed in Amara city, including six protesters, one AAH member and one intelligence officer, police sources said. Three protesters were killed in oil-rich Basra, one in Hilla, and one in Samawa, security sources said.

In Diwaniya city, twelve protesters died after being trapped in a burning building, morgue officials and police sources said.

The building, which housed the local offices of the Iran-backed Badr Organization, was apparently torched by protesters unaware that others were already inside.

Interior Ministry spokesman Khalid al-Muhanna said at least 68 members of the security forces were injured.

The sometimes violent demonstrations erupted in Baghdad on Oct. 1 and spread to southern cities.

They pose the biggest challenge to Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi since he took office just a year ago. Despite promising reforms and ordering a broad cabinet reshuffle, he has so far struggled to address the protesters’ discontent.

POVERTY, DESPITE OIL WEALTH
Despite the OPEC member country’s vast oil wealth, many Iraqis live in poverty, have limited access to clean water, electricity, basic healthcare or decent education as the country tries to recover from years of conflict and economic hardship.

Many Iraqis view the elite as subservient to one or other of Iraq’s two main allies, the United States and Iran. Many suspect these powers use Iraq to pursue their struggle for regional influence via proxies unconcerned with ordinary people’s needs.

“They hit us last night and again this morning. We don’t have any demands anymore, we want the government toppled,” said demonstrator Salah Mohammad.

“We want Iran to take its parties and leave, America to take its parties and leave, and let the Iraqi people decide.”

In Basra, Reuters footage showed protesters clashing with security forces who launched tear gas canisters and stun grenades and were met by rocks thrown at their vehicles. Young men carried the injured away, as protesters set police cars on fire.

An 8 p.m. curfew was imposed until further notice in the southern provinces of Basra, Muthanna, Wasit, Babel and Dhi Qar, after protesters torched offices of lawmakers, Shi’ite political parties and militia headquarters.

How the government and security forces handled Friday’s planned protests had been seen as a litmus test for the stability of the country with political leaders already on edge.

RAGE AGAINST THE ELITE
In a Thursday night address, Abdul Mahdi stressed that violence would not be tolerated and warned that any collapse of the government would drag Iraq into further turmoil.

Iraq’s top Shi’ite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, who in recent weeks criticized the government’s handling of the protests, urged calm on all sides during his sermon on Friday.

In Baghdad, many demonstrators initially believed authorities would refrain from violence after security forces killed dozens of protesters earlier this month.

Hundreds tried throughout the day to march into the city’s fortified Green Zone, which houses government buildings and foreign embassies, when they were stopped by security forces.

By afternoon, the mood had shifted with thousands of angry protesters wrapped in Iraqi flags under pouring rain, chanting that they were peaceful and calling political leaders corrupt.

As clashes broke out, tuk-tuks carried the injured to hospitals. Medical sources told Reuters hundreds of people had been treated for injuries, most related to tear gas exposure.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...d-as-fresh-protests-engulf-iraq-idUSKBN1X32SV
 
In any democratic country, people cannot topple the government by doing demonstration. We should respect the election result. If we are not satisfied then we can criticize and posting anti government comment on social media and elect other person/party in the next election. This is the rule of the game. If we violate the rule and the game then the situation can be like in Thailand and Egypt in which the military take advantage of the situation and doing coup.

Those Iranian back militia is also doing wrong thing by killing the demonstrator. The police should handle any demonstration, instead of military or worst a militia that should not be exist in the first place.
 
In any democratic country, people cannot topple the government by doing demonstration. We should respect the election result. If we are not satisfied then we can criticize and posting anti government comment on social media and elect other person/party in the next election. This is the rule of the game. If we violate the rule and the game then the situation can be like in Thailand and Egypt in which the military take advantage of the situation and doing coup.

Those Iranian back militia is also doing wrong thing by killing the demonstrator. The police should handle any demonstration, instead of military or worst a militia that should not be exist in the first place.
what if you are apart of a minority in the country and is being unfairly discriminated against? democracy won't help you because majority wins.
 
In any democratic country, people cannot topple the government by doing demonstration. We should respect the election result. If we are not satisfied then we can criticize and posting anti government comment on social media and elect other person/party in the next election. This is the rule of the game. If we violate the rule and the game then the situation can be like in Thailand and Egypt in which the military take advantage of the situation and doing coup.

Those Iranian back militia is also doing wrong thing by killing the demonstrator. The police should handle any demonstration, instead of military or worst a militia that should not be exist in the first place.

If those in TOP do not value your life... Then Their life shouldn't either... and Change shall occur. They sold their soul to the higher bidder, and are enjoying their life under the sun as if it was their own property.
Democracy is not Khilafat... It's unfortunately not a choice of reason... it's a choice from desires/emotions... They voted by following their selfish "Desires"
And As we know... what is born from emotion/desires... shall fall faster than a change of heart...

As for IQ, it's not a problem of President... it's the entire sys that is poisoned... from top to bottom...

what if you are apart of a minority in the country and is being unfairly discriminated against? democracy won't help you because majority wins.
Demonstrators aren't the minority but actually the Majority. That same Majority worked to wipe The Minority years ago when they themselves were in the shoes of that same Majority today...
The Irony...
 
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There is no miracle solution. Corruption is a deep and cultural problem. If Iraqis want to burn down what is left from their country, they should continue like this. The government represents the people and the culture. They should be really careful.. some countries have plans to separate Iraq by new civil war. Maybe a new election is better than what's happening now.
 
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Time to stop these evils hope turkey only country with some guts and faith on only one power the great greates ever ALLAH and his PROPHET P. B. U. H dont fear any one let people live their lifes as they want stop these proxies irawis and syrians seen a lot of hardships time to free them from these evils
 
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what if you are apart of a minority in the country and is being unfairly discriminated against? democracy won't help you because majority wins.

Poor little Soonnis being beaten by evil shiaaaaaas !!

In Iraq they don't care about Sunni Shia, the only split is Arab Kurd and we Arabs trash them always!

Some of our cunt levantine neighbors seem to have a problem with sects
 
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Wow, first it was dictotorships in middle east who were known for killing civilian but Iraqi democrazy is also mastering the art. First they killed over 100 and now 40+ protestors. It will be written in history with golden words.

RiP.
 
BASRA (Reuters) - At least three people died when an Iraqi Shi’ite militia group opened fire on a group of protesters attempting to break into the group’s local offices in the southern city of Nasiriya on Friday, police and hospital sources said.

More than 40 people were wounded in the incident at the offices of Asaib Ahl al-Haq’s offices in the province of Dhi Qar.

Separately, police sources said at least 18 people were wounded in the southern city of Amara when protesters tried to break into the militia’s local offices there.

It seems some agents are between the demonstrators to settle political differences.
 
iraq was much better in times of saddam Hussain,now it will be similar to Libya
 
Footage of Khamenei terrorists slaughtering protestors:


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asa'ib_Ahl_al-Haq

(Reuters) - Iran-backed militias deployed snipers on Baghdad rooftops during Iraq’s deadliest anti-government protests in years, two Iraqi security officials told Reuters.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...nipers-in-iraq-protests-sources-idUSKBN1WW0B1
if someone was trying to burn my house down and i have a gun, i would use it too.
 
what if you are apart of a minority in the country and is being unfairly discriminated against? democracy won't help you because majority wins.

Yup, democracy favors the majority, It is true. That is better than a minority who control the majority. Despite so, all democratic countries also respect minorities rights. Freedom of religion is also respected.
 
Yup, democracy favors the majority, It is true. That is better than a minority who control the majority. Despite so, all democratic countries also respect minorities rights. Freedom of religion is also respected.
oh please. I can think of dozens of examples to prove you wrong. for example, U.S. was always a democracy yet it slaughtered the native Americans.
 
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