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IRAQ WARS
Under fire, Iraq PM visits Basra after deadly violence
by Staff Writers
Basra, Iraq (AFP) Sept 10, 2018

Two months of protests in Iraq
Basra, Iraq (AFP) Sept 8, 2018 - Protests over corruption, unemployment and poor public services have gripped Iraq for two months, leaving 27 people dead after they began in the southern oil-rich province of Basra.

Here is a recap of the unrest since July:

- First death -

On July 8 dozens of people protest against unemployment in the port city of Basra. Security forces open fire and one person is killed.

Basra is the most oil-rich province in Iraq but is one of the worst served in infrastructure.

On July 12 Iraqi Oil Minister Jabbar al-Luaibi says protesters there have tried to break into an oil installation and have set fire to a gate and security post.

- Protests spread -

The next day hundreds of people protest in the centre of Basra, including in front of the local provincial headquarters.

Protests spread northwards to other regions with demonstrators taking to the streets in Dhi Qar, Maysan and Najaf provinces.

Dozens of people force their way into the waiting room at the airport serving the holy city of Najaf and several civilians and policemen are injured in clashes around the city of Nasiriyah.

Iraq's top Shiite authority Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani voices support for the protesters.

- Promises fail to quell protests-

On July 14 two protesters are killed in a shooting in the province of Muthanna, south of the capital Baghdad.

Demonstrators set alight the Basra headquarters of the Iranian-backed Badr organisation, prompting authorities to impose an overnight curfew across the province.

Iraq's Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announces investment worth $3 billion (2.6 billion euros) for Basra province, as well as pledging additional spending on housing, schools and services.

But the next day two more protesters are killed in a shooting in front of the governor's headquarters in Samawah, the largest city in Muthanna province.

Renewed clashes between security forces and protesters in Basra city leave 50 people injured near the governor's headquarters, the majority protesters.

Abadi meets with security and intelligence chiefs in Baghdad and warns them to be on alert but orders security services not to use live fire against unarmed civilians.

- Clashes in the capital -

On July 20 a man is killed after being shot in the southern city of Diwaniyah a medical source says, as hundreds of people gather outside the local headquarters of Badr.

Protests reach Baghdad. Hundreds of demonstrators are dispersed by water canon and tear gas as they head towards the fortified Green Zone, a high-security area where the government is headquartered.

On July 27 several hundred people take to the streets in Baghdad and chant "No to corruption!" and "Iran out!", and accuse leaders of being "thieves" and "corrupt".

- Electricity minister out -

Two days later Abadi sacks his minister of electricity Qassem al-Fahdawi -- whose departure had been demanded by protesters -- "because of the deterioration in the electricity sector".

On August 9 he sacks four electricity ministry officials.

- Green Zone hit -

On September 2 hundreds of protesters block different strategic parts of Basra province.

Two days later six demonstrators are killed in Basra city, according to a local official, the bloodiest day since the beginning of the unrest.

On September 7 overnight unidentified attackers fire shells into Baghdad's Green Zone. Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani denounces "the bad behaviour of senior officials".

Hundreds of protesters torch the Iranian consulate in Basra.

On September 8 unidentified assailants fire four rockets at Basra airport.

The health ministry says 12 people have been killed over the past five days.

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi sought to ease tensions in Iraq's oil-rich south on Monday with a visit to Basra, rocked by deadly protests over alleged corruption and government neglect.

After 12 demonstrators were killed and many of Basra's institutions torched, calm returned to the city late Saturday as Abadi's rivals in Baghdad said they wanted to form Iraq's next government without him.

For five days last week protesters had flooded the streets, clashing with security forces and torching the provincial headquarters, the Iranian consulate and the offices of armed groups.

Organisers have attempted to dissociate themselves from the violence and called for a halt to the demonstrations.

On Monday, Abadi met with officials in Basra who have accused Baghdad of neglecting the southern province and failing to redistribute oil wealth.

His visit came just 48 hours after the prime minister came under fire at an emergency meeting of parliament, where he faced calls to resign as his alliance with a populist Shiite cleric crumbled over the deadly unrest.

The cleric, Moqtada Sadr, distanced himself from his one-time ally Abadi, while a rival alliance of pro-Iranian former paramilitary fighters said it would work with Sadr to form a new government that excludes the premier.

The announcement endangered Abadi's hopes of holding onto his post.

The embattled premier shot back on Monday from Basra by accusing unnamed "political parties who have armed wings" of having tried "to set Basra province on fire", according to state broadcaster Al-Iraqiya.

His remarks came as Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, the spiritual leader of Iraq's Shiite majority, hinted in a statement on Monday that he was opposed to Abadi staying in the post.

Sistani, who is widely respected across Iraq, spoke of the political and economic challenges facing the country and said the next prime minister should not be someone who has already served.

- 'No security, no services' -

In Basra, Abadi also denounced violence against on diplomatic missions, Al-Iraqiya reported.

"Attacking a consulate or diplomatic post is unacceptable," Abadi was quoted as saying.

Protesters on Friday stormed Iran's fortified consulate, burning documents and equipment left behind by fleeing employees, none of whom were hurt, according to a consular spokesman.

Neighbouring Iran is a key power broker in Iraq and many of the militias and political parties whose offices were torched in last week's unrest are known to be close to the Islamic republic.

Iran's foreign ministry spokesman Bahram Ghassemi denounced the incident as a "savage attack", according to Iranian news agency Fars.

Basra has been at the epicentre of protests that broke out in July in the southern province before spreading to other parts of the country, as demonstrators demanded jobs and condemned corruption among Iraqi officials.

Anger in Basra flared on Tuesday over a growing health crisis, after more than 30,000 people were hospitalised by pollution in the city's water supply.

Twelve protesters have been killed in the ensuing clashes, with rights groups accusing security forces of using excessive force.

Officials have blamed the deaths and violence on "vandals" who infiltrated the demonstrators.

"There can be no public services without security," Abadi was quoted as saying during his visit on Monday by state television.

He also vowed he would not leave Basra "before receiving guarantees" for projects which the government is trying to launch to solve the water contamination crisis.

But residents and local officials were sceptical that the government -- which in July pledged a multi-billion dollar emergency plan to revive infrastructure in southern Iraq -- would keep its word.

Many have complained that Iraq's oil wealth is unfairly distributed with little of it trickling back to residents of Basra province.

On Saturday, Abadi's government announced it would allocate an unspecified amount of extra funds for Basra.

But demonstrators have been unimpressed, saying the billions of dollars pledged in July had failed to materialise.

Iraq says seven men convicted of 'terrorism' executed
Nassiriya, Irak (AFP) Sept 10, 2018 - Iraq executed by hanging seven of its citizens convicted of "terrorism", the head of the health ministry in the southern province of Dhi Qar said on Monday.

Doctor Abdel Hassan al-Jabri said the bodies of the seven men were handed over on Monday to the morgue of the state hospital of Nassiriya, the provincial capital.

They had been tried and convicted on charges of "terrorism", he said.

In December last year Iraq declared "victory" over the Islamic State group after a three-year war against the jihadists who once controlled nearly one third of the country.

In June, Iraq executed 13 jihadists after IS claimed responsibility for the murder of eight civilians.

Iraq has repeatedly faced criticism from international human rights groups over the high number of death sentences handed down by its anti-terrorist courts.

In 2017, at least 111 convicts were hanged in Iraq and this year 44 people have been executed.


Related Links
Iraq: The first technology war of the 21st century


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IRAQ WARS
Curfew imposed in Iraq's Basra as one dies in protests
Basra, Iraq (AFP) Sept 7, 2018
Three mortar shells were fired into Baghdad's green zone early Friday as a curfew was imposed in the southern Iraqi city of Basra after a fresh outbreak of violent protests over poor public services left one person dead and 35 injured. The rare assault by unidentified attackers on the heavily-fortified green zone, which houses Iraqi government officials and the US Embassy, came "without any victims or causing damage," the head of security for the capital said. The attack comes as Iraq struggles ... read more

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