Iraqi officials: One protester killed amid ongoing clashes

Iraqi officials said one anti-government protester
has been killed by security forces on Tuesday and 21 others wounded amid
ongoing clashes with security forces in Baghdad.
Security and hospital officials said the protester
died when he was struck with a rubber bullet fired by security forces on
Rasheed Street near the strategic Ahrar Bridge.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity in
line with regulations.
Protesters are occupying part of three key bridges -
Jumhuriya, Ahrar and Sinak - in a standoff with security forces.
At least 17 protesters have died in renewed clashes,
which kicked off last Thursday. The historic Rasheed Street, known for its
crumbling architecture, has been a flashpoint in the recent violent
escalations.
Security forces have used live ammunition, tear gas
and rubber bullets to repel protesters from scaling a barricade.
Over 350 people have died and thousands more wounded
since Oct. 1.
Iraqi protesters have also blocked several roads and
bridges in parts of Iraq’s southern city of Najaf on Tuesday, as well as roads
leading to the ports of Umm Qasr and Khor Al-Zubair, Iraqi News Agency
reported.
Meanwhile, the Iraqi authorities announced the
suspension of official working hours in the Dhi Qar province on Tuesday for
security reasons. Dhi Qar’s provincial capital is Nasiriyah which has been a
hotbed of violence during the last week of protests.
A number of protesters were injured, and several
cases of suffocation and injuries among security forces were reported,
according to the Iraqi Civil Defense.
Dhi Qar province police said in a statement that 28
policemen were wounded at the Petronas gate near the Gharraf oil field north of
the province on Monday. Protesters from Qalat Sukkar district, to the north of
Gharraf, organized a protest near the road leading to the oil field.
Roads, bridges blocked in Basra
In the southern province of Basra, Alarabiya sources
reported that roads were still blocked on Tuesday for the third consecutive
day. Iraqi protesters cut off all major roads leading to the center of the
province.
Suffocation cases in Babil
In the Babil Governorate, a security source reported
that a number of citizens suffered from suffocation due to the use of tear gas
by Iraqi security forces.
In the central province of Karbala, more than nine
demonstrators were reported injured in clashes between protesters and security
forces. The clashes continued on Monday evening, after a number of protesters
cut off roads and burned tyres.
Clashes in Baghdad
Protesters clashed with security forces in the
capital Baghdad on Tuesday.
A group of armed Iraqi protesters attempted to
attack police forces, according to the Iraqi News Agency.
Earlier in the day, the Iraqi Civil Defense
Directorate announced the injury of an officer and 10 policemen after being hit
by Molotov cocktails in the Hafez al-Qadi and Rashid Street in central Baghdad.
The civil defense teams were attacked while trying
to extinguish the fires, which broke out in the center of the Iraqi capital.
Those injured were transferred to a nearby hospital for treatment.
Iraqi Interior Ministry spokesman Brigadier Khalid
al-Muhanna announced on Tuesday the arrest of a group of “terrorists” who tried
to burn some shops in the capital city of Baghdad, stressing the imminent
issuance of judicial orders against them, the Iraqi News Agency reported.
"The central government stresses the need to
provide protection and preservation of property and lives of citizens, and to
prevent saboteurs who are trying to attack the citizens' funds and private and
public buildings," Al-Mehna said in a statement to the Iraqi News Agency.
"The Ministry of Interior is making great
efforts to secure peaceful demonstrations in Baghdad and the provinces despite
some attempts by some groups to attack the police forces and launch armed
attacks as well as the use of Molotov cocktails, gravel and stones."
The wave of protests in Iraq, which started in early
October against the corruption of the political class, is the largest and bloodiest
in the country in decades, with the use of tear gas, live bullets, rubber
bullets and sound bombs.
Mass protests began in Baghdad and some southern
Iraqi cities, demanding the overthrow of the regime and broad reforms, accusing
the political class of corruption and failure to run the country.