Iraq

Iraqis rally to relaunch year-old anti-government revolt

Agence France-Presse

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Iraqis rally to relaunch year-old anti-government revolt

Iraqi demonstrators gather on Al-Jumhuriya Bridge in the capital Baghdad on October 25, 2020, to mark the first anniversary of a massive anti-government movement demanding the ouster of the entire ruling class accused of corruption. - Thousands of Iraqis headed to the capital Baghdad's iconic Tahrir Square and the Green Zone, where authorities sit, to mark the first anniversary of an ongoing revolt against the country's stagnant political class. (Photo by AHMAD AL-RUBAYE / AFP)

AHMAD AL-RUBAYE / AFP

'We have the same demands as last year,' says a protester

Thousands of Iraqis headed on Sunday, October 25, to Baghdad’s iconic Tahrir Square and its high-security Green Zone to mark the first anniversary of a protest movement against the country’s stagnant political class.

“This is an important day, we are here to keep the movement going,” student Mohamed Ali said in the square, epicenter of the revolt.

The renewed mobilization has retained protesters’ key demand of the ouster of the entire ruling class accused of corruption and being beholden to neighboring Iran. 

Iraq is the second largest oil exporter in the world but has struggled to pay salaries for its bloated public sector.

“We have the same demands as last year,” Ali told Agence France-Presse.

In a months-long revolt launched in October 2019, hundreds of thousands of demonstrators camped out in Baghdad and southern cities to demand a total overhaul of a political system failing to deliver basic services and salaries.

About 600 protesters were killed and 30,000 wounded in clashes with security forces before the movement lost momentum then ground to a halt in the spring due to the coronavirus crisis and rising US-Iran tensions.

Since Saturday, military checkpoints and roadblocks have been erected around the square and the Green Zone, which is off-limits to Iraqi citizens.

The fortified Green Zone – site of parliament, government offices and the US embassy – is separated by a bridge from the square.

Riot police stationed around major thoroughfares have barred demonstrators waving Iraqi flags from trying to cross.

Other parallel bridges have also been sealed off.

With no central leadership behind the protests, activists are divided over whether to stay put in Tahrir or head to the Green Zone at the risk of violence breaking out. – Rappler.com

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