Assassinations of tribal sheikhs shake Iraqi street, coincide with protests
 
 
Under the slogan “We want a homeland”, the Iraqi people have
gathered to chant for freedom and equality and to demand justice. These
protests have been countered by the Iraqi security forces trying to force them
to end the demonstrations, but they returned again to announce their rejection
and adhere to their demands, while assassinations have also returned to Iraq
again.
Baghdad’s central Al-Tayaran Square witnessed a number of
demonstrators gather after their clash with the security forces, who demanded
they withdraw from the squares and vacate Tahrir Square on November 1. In
addition, clashes occurred in the far south of Basra after the protesters
refused to leave the square, where the security forces decided to end the
sit-in there by using tear gas canisters to disperse the people, which caused
suffocation and many tents to burn.
On the evening of Sunday, November 1, demonstrations in
support of the Basra sit-in began in Al-Haboubi Square in the southern city of
Nasiriyah, as protesters confirmed their solidarity with the Basra protests and
rejected the security forces’ attempts to end the demonstrations by force.
On Saturday, October 31, the Iraqi security forces reopened
Tahrir Square in Baghdad more than a year after its closure. They also
dismantled the tents in the field and reopened the Jamhuriya Bridge over the
Tigris River, the link between Tahrir Square and the Green Zone, where most of
the government and foreign embassies are located.
Some believe that the protesters have fully achieved their
demands through the formation of a government headed by Mustafa al-Kadhimi, who
was widely accepted and trusted by his predecessors.
Wave of assassinations
Coinciding with the ongoing protests, Iraq has also
witnessed a wave of assassinations, as the leader of the Bani Tayy tribe,
Sheikh Abdel Nasser al-Tarfi, was shot dead Sunday, November 1, by unknown
gunmen in the Abu Rummaneh district. Tarfi was known for his support of popular
protests in Iraq’s southern Maysan province.
Tarfi’s assassination raises concerns, as he was a prominent
tribal leader and had supported the demands of the popular movement in Maysan
and the rest of the Iraqi provinces, especially holding the corrupt accountable
and threatening revenge for those killed in the protests.
The tribal leader had also attacked armed militias, expressed
his support for the state security services, and more than once compared the
activities of the militias with the activities of ISIS.
Meanwhile, on October 28, Iraq witnessed the killing of one
of the sheikhs of the Bani Kaab tribe, Ali Fadhil al-Kaabi, as well as four
members of his family, in the Muqdadiya district of Diyala by ISIS elements.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


