Eleven killed in southern Iraq protests overnight, including policeman

Eleven people were killed during protests overnight in
two southern Iraqi cities, including a policeman, police and medical sources
said.
Seven protesters and the policeman died in Nassiriya
during clashes between demonstrators and security forces. Four more people were
killed in the city of Amara, the sources said.
The Associated Press reported a total death toll of 19
since the anti-governement protests erupted.
Troops patrolled central areas of Baghdad early on
Thursday to enforce a curfew ordered by Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi, but
sporadic demonstrations continued in some parts of the Iraqi capital, Reuters
witnesses said.
Iraqi security forces fired live rounds early Thursday
to break up protests help for a third day in Baghdad, an AFP photographer said,
despite a curfew in effect since dawn.
A few dozen protesters were burning tires in the
capital’s central Tahrir Square but riot police encircled them, pushed them
into side streets, and fired in the air, the photographer said.
Travelers to and from Baghdad airport, ambulances,
government employees in hospitals, electricity, and water departments, and
religious pilgrims are exempt from the curfew, the statement said. It was up to
provincial governors to decide whether to declare curfews elsewhere.
The unrest spread quickly from small-scale protests in
Baghdad on Tuesday over jobs, services, and government corruption. At least two
people were killed that day as security forces opened live fire and shot water
cannon and tear gas. Five more were killed on Wednesday, including a child.
Hundreds have been wounded including demonstrators and police.
The protests are the biggest against Abdul Mahdi’s
government, which took office nearly a year ago, and the biggest in the country
since September 2018.