Iraqi PM demands parliamentary support to reshuffle cabinet posts

Iraqi Prime Minister Adil Abdul Mahdi on Thursday urged lawmakers to support him to reshuffle cabinet posts and urged calm after three days of deadly civil unrest rocked the country.
Abdul Mahdi said there was no
‘magic solution’ to Iraq’s chronic governance problems and graft but pledged to
try to pass a law granting poor families a basic income.
He gave his remarks in a televised
speech as protesters demanded the fall of the government.
The prime minister said
protesters’ calls to end corruption were “correct” but said the government must
be helped to carry out its duties. Ministerial amendments must be approved by
parliament.
Abdul Mahdi on Wednesday declared
a curfew in Baghdad until further notice after at least seven people were
killed and more than 400 were injured during two days of nationwide
anti-government demonstrations.
Curfews were imposed earlier in
three southern cities while elite counter-terrorism troops opened fire on
protesters trying to storm Baghdad airport and deployed to the southern city of
Nassiriya after gunfights broke out between protesters and security forces,
police sources said.
Internet outages were reported
across the country.
Any power vacuum in Iraq, should
the government be toppled, could prove challenging for the region, given
Baghdad’s status as an ally of both the United States and Iran, who are locked
in a political standoff.