Iraq News Now

News24.com | 11 hurt as clashes erupt at Iraq protests over unpunished killings

Newscom   hurt as clashes erupt at Iraq protests over unpunished killings
News24.com | 11 hurt as clashes erupt at Iraq protests over unpunished killings

2021-05-26 00:00:00 - Source: Iraq News

Crowds of people gather for an anti-government demonstration over killing off civil activists and poor services in Tahrir Square in the centre of Iraq's capital Baghdad. (Photo by Murtadha Al-Sudani/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

  • Eleven people have been injured in a clash between police and protesters in Baghdad.
  • The protesters are demanding justice over a wave of deadly attacks on pro-democracy activists and journalists.
  • Among those injured were four security forces.


Eleven people were injured when clashes erupted as thousands of Iraqis protested in Baghdad on Tuesday to demand justice over a wave of deadly attacks on pro-democracy activists and journalists.

Waving portraits of victims, gunned down with silencers by unknown assailants, the demonstrators converged on the Iraqi capital's main squares including Tahrir, as police were deployed in force.

"Revolution against the parties," they chanted.

"Who killed me?" banners read.

A medical source later told AFP that seven demonstrators and four security forces members were injured in the ensuing unrest.

Since the fall of dictator Saddam Hussein in the US-led invasion of 2003, political parties have controlled life in Iraq and corruption has plagued state institutions.

Many in the crowds travelled from the southern cities of Karbala, Najaf and Nassiriya, where several of the killings occurred.

Anti-government campaigner Ihab al-Wazni was killed in the Shiite Muslim holy city of Karbala on 9 May, a day before prominent journalist Ahmed Hassan was also shot in southern Iraq. He remains in a coma after undergoing brain surgery.

Killings, attempted murders and abductions have targeted more than 70 activists since a protest movement erupted against government corruption and incompetence in 2019.

Authorities have consistently failed to publicly identify or charge the perpetrators of the killings, which have not been claimed.

However, activists have repeatedly blamed Iran-linked armed groups that wield considerable influence in Iraq.

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Elections have been set for October in response to a central demand of the protest movement.

But "anyone who runs in the elections as a free candidate not attached to a political party will be killed", 25-year-old demonstrator Hussein predicted grimly.

"These polls only aim to recycle the corrupt garbage."

President Barham Saleh said Sunday that $150 billion of stolen oil money had been smuggled out of Iraq since Saddam was ousted.

After Wazni's murder, a movement born out of the anti-government protests called Al-Beit Al-Watani - the National Bloc - said it would boycott the elections.

Since then, 17 groups have joined the call for a boycott.

Another protester in Baghdad, Mohammed, 22, played up a common distrust. "People have infiltrated the demonstration to take photos of us and kill activists once we leave," he said.





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