Iraqi forces kill 16 protesters after Iranian consulate torched

Iraqi forces kill 16 protesters after Iranian consulate torched

by Joseph Anthony
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A view of the Iranian consulate after Iraqi demonstrators stormed and set fire to the building during ongoing anti-government protests in Najaf, Iraq November 28, 2019. REUTERS/Alaa al-Marjani

Iraqi security forces shot dead 16 protesters in the southern city of Nassiriya on Thursday, medical sources said, and authorities imposed a curfew in Najaf after demonstrators burned its Iranian consulate.

Authorities set up joint military-civilian โ€œcrisis cellsโ€ to try to stem unrest and a paramilitary commander vowed to use force to stop any attack against Shiโ€™ite Muslim religious authorities.

The torching of the consulate in Najaf, the southern holy city, escalated violence in Iraq after weeks of mass demonstrations that aim to bring down a government seen as corrupt and backed by Tehran.

It was the strongest expression yet of the anti-Iranian sentiment of Iraqi demonstrators as the gulf widens between a largely Iran-aligned ruling elite and an increasingly desperate Iraqi majority with few opportunities and minimal state support.

The inability of Iraqโ€™s government and political class to deal with the unrest and answer protestersโ€™ demands has fuelled public anger.

Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi has promised electoral and anti-corruption reform but barely begun delivering while security forces have shot dead hundreds of mostly peaceful demonstrators in the streets of Baghdad and southern cities.

The protests, which began in Baghdad on Oct. 1 and have spread through southern cities, are the most complex challenge facing the Shiโ€™ite-dominated ruling class that has controlled state institutions and patronage networks since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled long-time Sunni ruler Saddam Hussein.

Young, mostly Shiโ€™ite protesters say politicians are corrupt, beholden to foreign powers โ€“ especially Iran โ€“ and they blame them for a failure to recover from years of conflict despite relative calm since the defeat of Islamic State in 2017.

Security forces opened fire on protesters who had gathered on a bridge in Nassiriya before dawn, medical sources said. Sixteen were killed and dozens wounded, they said.

A curfew was imposed in Najaf after protesters stormed and set fire to the Iranian consulate late on Wednesday. Businesses and government offices remained closed in the city, state media reported.

โ€œThe burning of the consulate last night was a brave act and a reaction from the Iraqi people โ€“ we donโ€™t want the Iranians,โ€ said Ali, a protester in Najaf. โ€œThere will be revenge from Iran Iโ€™m sure, theyโ€™re still here and the security forces are going to keep shooting us.โ€

A protester who witnessed the burning of the consulate said security forces had opened fire to try to stop it.

โ€œAll the riot police in Najaf and the security forces started shooting at us, as if we were burning Iraq as a whole,โ€ he said, declining to give his name.

โ€˜INFILTRATORS AND SABOTEURSโ€™

The military commander of the Popular Mobilisation Forces (PMF), an umbrella grouping of paramilitary groups whose most powerful factions are close to Tehran, said the groups would use full force against anyone trying to attack Iraqโ€™s most powerful Shiโ€™ite cleric, who is based in Najaf.

โ€œWe will cut the hand of anyone trying to get near (Grand Ayatollah Ali) al-Sistani,โ€ commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis said in a statement on the PMF website.

Observers said the events in Najaf would likely bring a tough response, rather than pushing the government into enacting reforms.

โ€œApart from casual statements โ€ฆ the government has not announced any plan (or) given any clear account of what measures it will take,โ€ said Dhiaa al-Asadi, advisor to powerful populist cleric Moqtada al-Sadr. โ€œInitiatives are going to be scarce.โ€

Fanar Haddad, senior research fellow at the National University of Singaporeโ€™s Middle East Institute, said the government might use the burning of the Iranian consulate as a pretext for an even more heavy-handed crackdown.

โ€œThe downside from the protestersโ€™ point of view is this might reinforce the governmentโ€™s narrative that protesters are infiltrators, saboteurs and up to no good,โ€ he said.

โ€œIt sends a message to Iran but also works to the advantage of people like Muhandis โ€ฆ (giving) a pretext to clamp down and framing what happened as a threat against Sistani.โ€

Sistani rarely speaks on political issues but traditionally wields enormous influence over public opinion, especially in Iraqโ€™s southern Shiโ€™ite heartland. He has used Friday sermons in recent weeks to urge the government to enact real reform and stop killing demonstrators.

Security forces have used live ammunition, tear gas and stun grenades against mostly unarmed protesters. Some demonstrators have lobbed petrol bombs, bricks and fired slingshots at police.

Authorities set up โ€œcrisis cellsโ€ in several provinces to try to restore order, a military statement said on Thursday. They would be led by provincial governors but include military leaders who would take charge of local security forces.

The violence has killed more than 350 people, according to police and medics.

REUTERS

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