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Page added on January 6, 2013

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Mass protests against government spread in Iraq

Public Policy

Tens of thousands of protesters rallied across Iraq on Friday, charging that Sunni Muslims had been disenfranchised under the Shiite-led government of Prime Minister Nouri Maliki and pressing for detainees to be freed.

Protests have raged for weeks and continued even after the Iraqi justice ministry freed nearly a dozen female prisoners and said it would transfer others to jails closer to their homes. The unrest has spread from Anbar province, where infuriated protesters have blocked a key highway, to other Sunni strongholds across northern and western Iraq.

“How much longer will our children stay in prisons for no other reason than being Sunni,” a man who gave his name as Abu Abdullah told Agence France-Presse at one demonstration in Baghdad, where protesters hoisted banners calling for anti-terror laws to be repealed.

Former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, one of Maliki’s chief opponents, called for him to step down in a statement read on Iraqi television, Bloomberg reported Friday. The push against Maliki has also been bolstered by powerful Shiite cleric Muqtada Sadr, who reached out to the protesters Friday by joining in prayer at a Sunni mosque, according to the Associated Press.

Maliki and his government have their “last chance for reconciliation,” Alaa Makki, who leads the Sunni Iraqiya bloc in parliament, told Al Jazeera. Protesters “are waiting for the government to send somebody there, representing the governmental concerns.”

The prime minister appears to be trying to head off clashes that could escalate the situation. In a statement Friday (link in Arabic), Maliki called on the armed forces and police to “exercise the utmost restraint” in dealing with protesters. He also asked demonstrators to stop “sectarian and terrorist groups” from infiltrating and sowing sectarian strife, “which if returned, God forbid, it will burn us all.”

Kurdish and Sunni sources told Reuters that Sunni Islamists are driving the protests in the hopes of creating their own semi-autonomous region akin to Kurdistan, emboldened by the belief that the ongoing uprising in Syria will ultimately tip the regional balance of power toward Sunnis.

The unrest comes ahead of elections slated for this spring. Sadr is believed to be making gestures to the Sunni protesters and religious minorities in order to style himself as a unifying figure ahead of the provincial vote.

LA Times



2 Comments on "Mass protests against government spread in Iraq"

  1. BillT on Sun, 6th Jan 2013 3:00 pm 

    Civil war is probably going to happen this year and the whole Middle East will be drawn in and oil will dribble out of the Gulf when that happens.

  2. Arthur on Sun, 6th Jan 2013 6:08 pm 

    In Yugoslavia Tito stepped down in 1980 and ethnic tensions started to emerge. The country was a result of WW1 and formed under supremacists Serbs, who took over the leading role over the other Slavs from German Austrians. The breakup started in 1991, shortly after the fall of communism in 1990. Next was ethnic cleansing and land grab.

    In Iraq ethnic cleansing already took place to a large extent, nota bene under the eyes of the US invaders. Land grab and split up is next. Iraq is a fake country resulting from a drawing board somewhere in a foreign office of European colonialists.

    What is happening in Syria and in Iraq could very well lead to ethnic cleansing in the entire Middle East. There has been a time that European conservatives were afraid that the communist revolution of 1917 would swap over to the rest of the planet; in the end it was ‘only’ half the planet (ignoring the Roosevelt government). A similar development could be ethnic cleansing on a global scale, as we are leaving the progressive world of the 20th century, solely enabled by economic growth and moving into the archaic world predicted by Samuel Huntington: ‘Clash of Civilizations’. Political developments as a function of the availability of fossil fuel.

    The most diverse countries have the least future.

    Stable:
    Japan
    South-Korea
    China (excluding Tibet and Ugurs)
    Russia (minus Caucasia)
    Eastern Europe, Italy

    Unstable:
    US
    Western Europe (France, UK, Belgium, Holland)
    India

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