Iraq still waits for desired reform a year after October uprising
In a country floating on a sea of oil, the Iraqi people
suffer from devastation and the lack the most basic living rights, which worsen
year after year, pushing the people to boil and become fed up with the
worsening conditions and the escalation of the oppression by the malicious
Iranian hands interfering in Iraq’s domestic affairs.
Last year, Iraq witnessed large popular protests following
the deterioration of the situation in the country and the corruption of the
political class that had refused to achieve social justice for the people. The
protests were the largest since 2003 and reached their climax in the streets in
October, when more than 600 demonstrators were killed and many more wounded.
October uprising
Iraqi activists called for marches in various cities on
Thursday, October 1 to commemorate the first anniversary of the outbreak of the
bloody protests that swept the country in October 2019.
Many activists coordinated calls for marches in various
governorates, heading to cities’ central squares to commemorate the first
anniversary of the October uprising against the political class and to
commemorate the lives of the more than 600 who were killed and thousands who
were wounded during the protests, following their success in pushing the
government of Adel Abdul Mahdi to resign.
The mass protests were met at the time by gunfire by the
security authorities, but the situation did not calm down for days and then
exploded again at the end of that month, but taking another course. The
protests were able to force then-Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi to resign and to
change the election laws that had allowed the political class to control the
country's powers for years.
Iranian influence
Iran’s influence was one of the most important reasons that
shaped the poor conditions in Iraq and added difficulties to the people's lives
due to Tehran’s malicious interference in Iraqi affairs, in addition to the
spread of corruption within the ruling class.
Angry demonstrators burned Iran’s consulate in the city of
Najaf, and Iraqis accused the militias loyal to the Iranian regime of targeting
the demonstrators through assassination campaigns and organized kidnapping.
The assassination of Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani
in January 2020 helped ease the protests in Iraq due to the severe tensions
between the United States and Iran, which reached the level of clashes between
them, including striking military bases and retaliatory responses.
Kadhimi's plan
After the resignation of Abdul Mahdi’s government, Iraq
faltered from attempts to form a new government, but political forces
eventually agreed to choose intelligence head Mustafa al-Kadhimi as prime
minister in May.
Now, the Kadhimi government faces great challenges to solve
the country’s crises and to make some adjustments in order to fix the damages
left by the previous government, which had led to the deterioration of many
industrial, commercial and agricultural sectors.
On the anniversary of the October uprising, Kadhimi tweeted,
“This government came on the basis of the road map imposed by the movement,
grievances and aspirations of the Iraqi people, and we affirm our loyalty to
our people and to the roadmap imposed by the blood and sacrifices of their
vanguard youth. We were and still are loyal to the October movement and its
lofty outcomes, and we have worked since the first day on the undertakings of
the ministerial curriculum, starting with identifying and sorting the martyrs
and the wounded, which is the natural path for restoring their rights and
honoring their national position, and then turning that into a legal
investigative context that guarantees the restoration of the rights of those
involved in Iraqi blood.”
Feeble promises
Many demonstrators see nothing new and that most of their
demands have not been achieved, such as fighting corruption and improving
living conditions, which have not witnessed any tangible change. The World Bank
expressed the possibility of Iraq’s poverty rate doubling to 40% this year, in
addition to the rise in youth unemployment, which is currently 36%.
Kadhimi announced that early elections would be held in June
2021, which is one of the most prominent demands of the demonstrators. Last August,
the authorities employed hundreds of youth in the Ministry of Defense, but it
is clear that this step was not sufficient to stop sit-ins among those
demanding jobs.



