Iraqis defy crackdown to hold biggest protests yet
Tens of thousands of Iraqis massed in Baghdad’s
Tahrir Square on Friday in the biggest demonstrations since anti-government
protests erupted a month ago, defying security forces that have killed scores
of people and harshly criticizing Iran’s involvement in the country’s affairs.
The square and the wide boulevards leading into it
were packed with flag-waving protesters, as security forces reinforced
barricades on two bridges leading to the heavily-fortified Green Zone, the seat
of government. The protesters want sweeping change to the political system
established after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, which they blame for widespread
corruption, high unemployment and poor public services.
At least 255 people have been killed in two major
waves of protests in the past month, including five who died Friday of wounds
sustained earlier, according to security and medical officials who spoke on
condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to brief reporters. At
least 350 people were wounded Friday as security forces fired tear gas grenades
and rubber bullets to drive people back from the bridges.
Many protesters directed their rage at Iran, which
emerged as a major power broker after the overthrow of Saddam Hussein and has
close ties to powerful political parties and state-backed militias that were
mobilized to battle the Islamic State group but have now become an imposing
political faction.
Videos circulated online of a group of protesters
holding a poster showing Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the
head of its elite Quds force, Gen. Qassim Soleimani, with their faces crossed
out. The video, which showed protesters beating the poster with their shoes,
appeared to have been filmed Thursday in Tahrir Square. On Friday, protesters
marched over an Iranian flag painted on the pavement with a swastika added to
it.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Iraq’s
government “should listen to the legitimate demands made by the Iraqi people
who have taken to the streets to have their voices heard.”
In a statement, he called on all sides to reject
violence and said the Iraqi people deserve genuine accountability and justice.
This month’s protests in Iraq and similar
demonstrations in Lebanon are fueled by local grievances and mainly directed at
the political elite, but they also pose a challenge to Iran, which closely
backs both governments. An increasingly violent crackdown in Iraq has raised
fears of a backlash by Iran and its heavily armed local allies.
On Friday, a group of about 50 militia supporters
showed up at the protest, prompting other demonstrators to chant: “Iran take
your hands off, the people don’t want you!”
The militias, known as the Popular Mobilization
Forces, said in a statement that they stood with the protesters and were
committed to protecting them. But the statement warned of “foreign interests”
that it said wanted to sow division in order to cause “internal fighting, chaos
and destruction.”
The remarks echoed those made by Khamenei and the
Iran-backed Hezbollah militant group in Lebanon, which has accused unidentified
foreign powers of manipulating the protests.
Iraq’s influential Shiite clerical establishment,
which is seen as politically independent, condemned “attacks on peaceful
protesters and all forms of unjustified violence,” saying those responsible
should be held accountable.
Shiite cleric Ahmed al-Safi, who delivered a Friday
sermon on behalf of the clerical leadership, said authorities should not allow
“any person or group or biased entity, or any regional or international party”
to impose its view on the Iraqi people — an apparent reference to Iran.
The sermon was delivered in the Shiite holy city of
Karbala, where masked men suspected of being linked to the security forces
opened fire on protesters earlier this week, killing at least 18 people.
Amnesty International says security forces in
Baghdad have fired military-grade tear gas grenades directly into the crowds,
causing horrific wounds and occasionally lodging the projectiles in people’s
skulls. During an earlier wave of demonstrations, snipers shot protesters in
the head and chest, with nearly 150 killed in less than a week.
One protester, Ahmad Fadel, showed up dressed head
to toe in sniper camouflage that resembled threshed hay.
“All of Iraq is out today against the regime and the
corrupt government and parties,” he said. “I’m wearing this as a form of
support to the protesters and a message to the sniper who targets protesters:
You will not scare us.”
The protesters have called for the resignation of
the government and sweeping changes to the political system established after
the U.S. invasion, which apportions power among the Shiite majority and Sunnis
and Kurds.
Iraq has held regular elections since then, but they
have been dominated by sectarian political parties, many of which are close to
Iran. The protests have occurred in Baghdad and mostly Shiite southern Iraq,
and have been directed against the Shiite-led government. In southern Iraq,
demonstrators have attacked and set fire to political party offices.
The protesters accuse their rulers of squandering the
country’s oil wealth, pointing to its poor infrastructure and frequent power
outages more than 15 years after the overthrow of Saddam and the lifting of
international sanctions.
“I was born to be respected, among people who should
be respected,” said a protester who identified himself as Abu Sajad. “But as
far as we are concerned, we have the worst passport in the world and the worst
nationality. We are the No. 1 country when it comes to corruption. We have the
second or fourth largest oil reserves but we are a poor nation.”
President Barham Salih said Thursday he would
approve early elections once a new electoral law is drafted, expressing support
for the protesters but saying reforms would have to be enacted through
constitutional means. He said Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi is willing to
resign once political leaders agree on a replacement.
But the process of forming a new government could
take weeks or even months, and a Cabinet reshuffle seems unlikely to satisfy
the protesters.
Thousands also gathered in the main square of Najaf,
another Shiite holy city, late Thursday. Groups of men danced and waved Iraqi
flags, while volunteers handed out falafel sandwiches cooked on site.
“This is a great revolution,” said Marwa Ahmed, one
of several women in the rally. “We will not give up or back down until our
demands are met.”