Assailants Burn Down Headquarters of Communist Party in Iraq’s Najaf

Unidentified assailants attacked the headquarters of the Iraqi Communist Party in Najaf with Molotov cocktails, burning the offices despite causing no causalities.
The attack came amid speculation
of escalating violence and political assassinations ahead of the parliamentary
elections scheduled for next October.
A new wave of protests is also
expected to erupt in the country over deteriorating economic conditions and
services, and lack of job opportunities.
The party’s local administration
issued a statement saying that its headquarters was attacked by Molotov
cocktails at dawn Friday. It condemned the cowardly act while affirming that
the party will continue to call for a change that rids the country of corrupt
persons.
The statement called on the
government to control illegitimate weapons and establish security as a
necessary step to holding the elections, praising "the rapid response of
the security forces in the governorate.”
It did not accuse a specific party
of the attack, but activists close to the party linked between the attack and
the upcoming commemoration of the first anniversary of the deadly clampdown on
protesters in Najaf's Sadr Square.
A source believes the attack may
have occurred after the Communist party announced an alliance with the civil
society.
The source confirmed to Asharq
Al-Awsat that the party will form alliances with civil society groups from the
October movement in various governorates.
Despite its well-known secular
orientations, the Communist party joined Saeroon alliance with the Sadrist
movement during the 2018 parliamentary elections.
Only two candidates of the
Communist party won in the polls. However, they resigned in October 2019, ending
the party’s alliance with the movement.
Despite the lack of representation in Najaf, the Communist Party maintained a permanent presence there for years, especially that a large number of its leaders and founding members originate from the governorate.