After the resignation of Abdul Mahdi: 3 possible scenarios for the Iraqi scene
Iraq has entered a new phase with the
announcement of Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi to resign to parliament, amid
escalating street protests and reveal the role of large tribes in maintaining
security in rebellious cities, with at least 418 people killed, and more than
15 thousand wounded, since the outbreak of demonstrations Last October.
Abdel Mahdi announced on Saturday (November
30th) that he had formally submitted his resignation to parliament and invited
him to consider it at its next session.
The protests continued on Sunday, the first of
December in several provinces, such as Dhi Qar, Maysan, Najaf, Karbala,
Diwaniya, Muthanna, Babylon and Diyala which announced the official disruption
of duty in memory of the lives of the martyrs of the massacres of Nasiriyah and
Najaf.
Hundreds of demonstrators closed the Diwaniya
governorate building in the center of the city, and told those in charge of
protecting the building not to allow the governor and his deputies to stay, and
hung banners on the main gate of the building read "closed by order of the
people."
In the eastern province of Diyala, angry
protesters blocked the road linking Baghdad, and police chief Captain Habib
al-Shammari: The hundreds of demonstrators blocked the road linking Baghdad and
the northern provinces at Jdeid al-Shat in Diyala province, in solidarity with
the protests of the central and southern provinces.
The most prominent cities are the city of
Nasiriyah, which witnessed a horrific massacre of demonstrators; which led to
the issuance of an Iraqi arrest warrant for Lieutenant General Jamil
al-Shammari, accused of killing protesters in Dhi Qar province.
Al-Shammari is a key suspect in the killing of
demonstrators in Nasiriyah in Dhi Qar after Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul
Mahdi was tasked with restoring security in Nasiriyah. He previously served as
the head of Basra operations in the bloody demonstrations in the summer of
2018.
One of the sheikhs of the Bedour clan
confirmed that Jamil al-Shammari wanted a clan for all the clans of Dhi Qar,
which lost 25 young people, one of them from the Bedour tribe.
The Secretary of the Council of Arab Tribes
Thaer al-Bayati highlighted in an interview on Saturday 30 November, the
arrival of the commander of the Qods Force of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards
Qasem Soleimani, accompanied by 520 members of the Revolutionary Guards to
Baghdad to form a joint government that will be the top priority to put down
the Iraqi revolution.
Iraq to where?
Mahmoud Jaber, a researcher in the Iraqi affairs,
believes that the Iraqi scene after the resignation of Adel Abdul Mahdi, is
waiting for three scenarios, the first: the continuation of demonstrations and
the escalation of the ceiling demands for the departure of the entire regime,
which was evident in the street from the strike of eight provinces in the south
and center.
He pointed out that this scenario will lead to
the dissolution of parliament, and the holding of new elections, and may
develop to amend the Constitution.
The second scenario, according to Jaber, is to
choose a new caretaker prime minister and calm the street until parliament
completes its parliamentary session, a scenario in which political forces are
betting to stay in power, with moves to reduce street congestion.