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Iraqis keep up anti-regime demos despite PM's vow to quit
by Staff Writers
Nasiriyah, Iraq (AFP) Nov 30, 2019

US says Iraqi leaders must address grievances after PM quits
Washington (AFP) Nov 29, 2019 - The United States called Friday on Iraqi leaders to address the "legitimate" grievances of protesters including corruption after the embattled prime minister announced his resignation.

"We share the protesters' legitimate concerns," a State Department spokeswoman said, echoing a US line through the two months of protests.

"We continue to urge the government of Iraq to advance the reforms demanded by the people, including those that address unemployment, corruption and electoral reform," she said.

The spokeswoman did not comment directly on Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi's decision to quit, saying that the State Department deferred to the Iraqi government for further comment.

Abdel Mahdi had been seen as a nimble enough player to please both Iran and the United States, arch-adversaries that both have longstanding connections inside Iraq.

He weathered two months of protests that had killed more than 400 people but gave up Friday when he lost the support of the Shiite Muslim-majority nation's top cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani.

The United States has repeatedly called for Iraqi leaders to listen to protesters but has been relatively restrained about intervening in a state that it completely recrafted after the 2003 invasion.

Much of the US focus has been on demanding that Iraqis distance themselves from neighboring Iran.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has also threatened to impose sanctions on Iraqi officials found to have stolen wealth.

A State Department official said as the crisis escalated that Abdel Mahdi was the best prime minister that the United States could expect.

Vice President Mike Pence did not see him on a quick visit to Iraq last weekend, with a US official saying security concerns prevented him from going to Baghdad.

France condemns 'excessive' force used against Iraq protests
Paris (AFP) Nov 29, 2019 - France on Friday denounced the excessive use of force used against protesters in Iraq, after two months of anti-government protests led to the Iraqi prime minister's resignation.

The grassroots protest movement has been the largest Iraq has seen in decades -- but also the deadliest, with more than 400 people killed since early October, and 15 others shot dead on Friday in the flashpoint city of Nasiriyah.

Thursday was also one of the bloodiest days yet, with 44 demonstrators killed and nearly 1,000 wounded in Baghdad and across the south.

"France strongly condemns the excessive and disproportionate use of force against protesters in Baghdad and the southern cities," a statement from the French foreign ministry said.

"France reaffirms its commitment to the right to demonstrate peacefully and calls on all parties to refrain from any act of violence," it added.

Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi announced he would resign on Friday just hours after the country's top cleric urged parliament to replace the cabinet.

Abdel Mahdi would be the first prime minister to step down since Iraq became a parliamentary system following the US-led ouster of Saddam Hussein in 2003.

"France continues to accompany and support Iraq, its authorities and the Iraqis in this crucial period for the democratic future of the country," the statement added.

Iraqis kept up anti-government protests in Baghdad and the south on Saturday, unsatisfied with the premier's vowed resignation and insisting on the overhaul of a system they say is corrupt and beholden to foreign powers.

Protesters have hit the streets since early October in the largest grassroots movement Iraq has seen in decades, sparked by fury at poor public services, lack of jobs and endemic government graft.

The decentralised demonstrations were met with violence from security forces and armed groups, leaving more than 420 people dead and 15,000 wounded according to an AFP tally compiled from medics and an Iraqi rights commission.

The toll spiked dramatically this week, when a crackdown by security forces left dozens dead in Baghdad, the Shiite shrine city of Najaf and the southern hotspot of Nasiriyah -- the birthplace of Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi.

Facing pressure from the street and the country's top Shiite cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, Abdel Mahdi announced on Friday that he would submit his resignation to parliament, due to meet on Sunday.

But demonstrations have not subsided, with crowds in the capital and across the Shiite-majority south sticking to their weeks-long demand of complete regime change.

"We'll keep up this movement," said one protester in the southern hotspot of Diwaniyah, where thousands turned out early on Saturday.

"Abdel Mahdi's resignation is only the first step, and now all corrupt figures must be removed and judged," he said.

- 'We won't leave' -

Teenager protesters also held their ground in Baghdad, staring down security forces positioned behind concrete barriers to protect government buildings.

"We won't leave our barricades until the regime falls, until we get jobs, water, electricity," one protester said.

Hundreds also converged in the main protest camp in Nasiriyah's city centre and set tyres ablaze on three bridges spanning the Euphrates River, according to AFP's correspondent.

Iraq's second holy city Karbala was rocked by overnight clashes with young protesters and security forces trading fire bombs until the early hours of the morning.

Najaf was relatively calm on Saturday, according to AFP's correspondent, but protests there usually swell in the afternoon and evening.

This week's stunning turnaround was set off when protesters stormed and burned the Iranian consulate in Najaf late Wednesday, accusing Iraq's neighbour of propping up the Baghdad government.

Tehran demanded Iraq take decisive action against the protesters and hours later Abdel Mahdi ordered military chiefs to "impose security and restore order".

Men in civilian clothes opened fire on demonstrators and tribal fighters deployed in the streets to defend them in standoffs that sparked fears of widespread clashes.

Over two days, 42 people were shot dead in Nasiriyah, 22 in Najaf and three in Baghdad.

Iraq's Supreme Judicial Council on Saturday said it had formed a committee to probe the unrest, pledging to "punish those who attacked protesters".

Chief justice Faeq Zeidan is among a list of names circulated as possible replacements for Abdel Mahdi.

- Sistani's switch -

Accountability for those killed has become a key demand of protesters in Iraq, where tribal traditions -- including revenge for murder -- remain popular.

"Every victim has a mother, a father, a tribe who won't stay quiet," said a Baghdad protester.

"Otherwise there could be civil war."

The rising death toll sparked a dramatic intervention from Sistani, the 89-year-old spiritual leader of many of Iraq's Shiites.

For week he called for restraint and urged parties to get "serious" about reform, ramping up his rhetoric on Friday when he urged parliament to end its support for the government.

Within minutes, leading political factions called for a vote of no-confidence, including one of the government's key sponsors, the Saeroon parliamentary bloc led by firebrand cleric Moqtada Sadr.

Abdel Mahdi's other main backer, the Fatah bloc, called for "the necessary changes in the interests of Iraq" in a departure from its usual statements of support for him.

By Friday afternoon, Abdel Mahdi announced he would submit a formal letter to parliament "requesting my resignation" in keeping with Sistani's wishes.

He held an extraordinary cabinet session Saturday on his resignation, during which ministers also approved his chief of staff stepping down.

Parliament is due to meet Sunday and if it passes a no-confidence vote, the cabinet would remain in place as caretakers until the president names a new premier.

Iraq's constitution does not include a provision for the resignation of the premier, so submitting a letter to parliament would trigger a no-confidence vote.

The bloodshed this week sparked criticism from the United Nations, which said the deaths "cannot be tolerated."

Its top official Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert met Abdel Mahdi on Saturday but there were no details on the talks.

Iraq: two months of anti-regime protests
Baghdad (AFP) Nov 29, 2019 - Anti-government demonstrations that erupted in Iraq on October 1 have escalated into the country's deadliest protest movement in decades, with more than 400 people killed.

After Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi offered to resign on Friday, here is a recap of the unrest which is focused in the capital and southern provinces.

- Spontaneous gatherings -

On October 1, hundreds of people gather in Baghdad and cities in southern Iraq in leaderless protests against corruption, unemployment and poor public services.

Riot police use water cannons, rubber bullets and live fire to disperse a crowd of about 1,000 in the capital's Tahrir (Liberation) Square, which becomes the focus of the protest movement.

The first two demonstrators are killed, one in Baghdad and another in a southern province.

- Unrest spreads -

The next day, protests multiply across southern Iraq.

Influential firebrand Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr announces support for "peaceful protests" despite leading the biggest bloc in parliament and being a main sponsor of the government.

On October 3, thousands defy a curfew in Baghdad and other cities, blockading streets and burning tyres.

Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi defends his year-old government on television, asking for more time to implement reforms.

On October 4, as clashes intensify in Baghdad, Sadr calls on the government to resign and for early elections.

On October 6, the cabinet announces reforms including land distribution, boosted social welfare and the ousting of corrupt officials.

- Deadly second wave -

After a two-week pause, protests resume on October 24, a day before the anniversary of Abdel Mahdi taking office.

In an escalation, protesters in the south torch dozens of provincial government buildings and offices linked to the powerful Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary force.

At least 63 people are killed over two days, according to the Iraqi Human Rights Commission.

The protests swell on October 28 as students, schoolchildren and professors join rallies in Baghdad and southern cities.

- Politicians scramble -

On October 31, President Barham Saleh raises the possibility of early parliamentary elections and the prime minister's resignation.

On November 3, demonstrators in the central city of Karbala attack the Iranian consulate, amid charges that Iran is propping up the government. Four are shot dead.

The next day Iraqi security forces fire live rounds as protesters mass near Baghdad's state television headquarters.

Abdel Mahdi says on November 5 early elections would be unrealistic under the current constitution, a hint that he intends to stay on.

On November 9, Iran brokers a back-room deal to keep Abdel Mahdi's government in office.

- Iran mission torched -

On November 17, Iraqis flood the streets of Baghdad and southern cities in a general strike.

There are bomb blasts across Baghdad on November 26 which kill six people and are claimed by the Islamic State group.

On November 27, protesters torch the Iranian consulate in the holy city of Najaf, shouting "Iran out!"

The following day is one of the bloodiest in the uprising, with 46 protesters killed and 1,000 wounded across the country, including around two dozen in the southern city of Nasiriyah.

On November 29, demonstrators in Nasiriyah mob a police station and torch police cars. Another 15 protesters are killed.

There are also new clashes in Najaf.

- PM offers to resign -

At his Friday sermon, Iraq's top Shiite cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani calls for a new government, in a show of support for the demonstrators.

Hours later Abdel Mahdi says he will submit his resignation to parliament.


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


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IRAQ WARS
Iraqi protesters torch Iran consulate amid deadly protests
Najaf, Iraq (AFP) Nov 27, 2019
Iraqi protesters torched the Iranian consulate in the holy city of Najaf on Wednesday in a dramatic escalation of anti-government demonstrations that have left more than 350 people dead. Tall flames and thick clouds of smoke rose from the entrance of the consulate in the southern city, AFP's correspondent there said. "Victory to Iraq!" and "Iran out!" protesters chanted, outraged at the country they blame for propping up a government they've been demonstrating against for nearly two months. ... read more

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