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Supporters of Iraq's Sadr in prayer rally amid political deadlock by AFP Staff Writers Baghdad (AFP) July 15, 2022 Thousands of supporters of Iraqi Shiite leader Moqtada Sadr gathered Friday for a Baghdad prayer service, in an attempt to influence stalled talks on forming a new government. It was not clear if the influential cleric and politician would lead the sermon, or even if he intended to appear before supporters at the midday prayer, organised to take place on Al-Falah Avenue, in Sadr City. After the 2003 US invasion that toppled dictator Saddam Hussein, this district of the capital was named after Mohammad Sadr, Moqtada's father, a cleric who was assassinated in 1999 under Saddam's rule. The Friday prayers were ostensibly organised as a tribute to Sadr's father. In scorching heat, several thousand people gathered on Al-Falah Avenue, watched by a large security presence, according to an AFP journalist. Prayer mats in hand, participants waved Iraqi flags. "We obey Moqtada Sadr, as we obey God and his prophets," Sheikh Kadhim Hafez Mohammed al-Tai told AFP. In addition to his religious authority -- considered "sayyid", a descendant of the Prophet Muhammad -- Sadr exercises significant political influence in Iraq. His parliamentary bloc won 73 seats in the October 2021 election, making it the largest legislative faction. But since the election, talks to form a new government have stalled and the country remains mired in political crisis. The various Shiite political factions, representing Iraq's largest demographic, remain unable to agree on a new prime minister. Sadr initially supported the idea of a "majority government" which would have sent his Shiite adversaries from the pro-Iran Coordination Framework into opposition. The former militia leader then surprised many by compelling his deputies to resign from parliament in June. This gesture was seen as a move to exert pressure on rival factions to speed up formation of a new government. However, a month after this collective resignation, the process has not advanced. The leaders of the Coordination Framework remain unable to find agreement on a new head of government and the oil-rich country remains mired in a socio-economic crisis, despite elevated global oil prices.
Troubled waters: Iraqi spa reborn after IS massacres Hamam Al-Alil, Iraq (AFP) July 10, 2022 A mineral spa in northern Iraq is regaining popularity as renovation work has brought back visitors, in a city once ruled by jihadists who carried out mass executions. Hisham Khaled often visited the Hamam al-Alil baths as a child with his father but since the facility's restoration he comes alone. His father, a policeman, was executed near the baths by the Islamic State (IS) group in 2016. Located 30 kilometres (20 miles) south of Mosul, Hamam al-Alil - meaning the baths of the sick in Ar ... read more
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