BAGHDAD —
Twelve protesters were killed Monday after supporters of cleric
Moqtada Al-Sadr
stormed the government palace in Baghdad’s Green Zone after the powerful Shiite
leader said he was quitting politics.
اضافة اعلان
Shots were fired
in the fortified area which houses government buildings as well as diplomatic
missions, an AFP correspondent said, as tensions soared amid an escalating
political crisis that has left Iraq without a new government, prime minister,
or president for months.
Medics told AFP
that 12 Sadr supporters had been shot dead and 270 others protesters were hurt
— some with bullet wounds and others suffering tear gas inhalation.
Supporters of Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada Al-Sadr gather outside and on the balcony of the Government Headquarters in Baghdad’s Green Zone, on August 29, 2022.
Witnesses said
earlier that Sadr loyalists and supporters of a rival Shiite bloc, the pro-
Iran Coordination Framework, had exchanged fire.
The army announced
a nationwide curfew from 7pm (4pm GMT), and security forces later patroled the
capital.
Calling the
developments “an extremely dangerous escalation”, the United Nations Assistance
Mission in Iraq urged “all” sides to “refrain from acts that could lead to an
unstoppable chain of events”.
“The very
survival of the state is at stake,” it warned.
The US also
urged calm amid the “disturbing” reports of unrest in Baghdad.
Protests later
spread to other parts of the country, with Sadr followers storming government
buildings in the cities of Nasiriyah and Hillah south of Baghdad, an AFP
correspondent and witnesses said, with some roads also blocked in Hillah.
‘Definitive retirement’
Iraq has been mired in political deadlock since legislative elections
in October last year, due to disagreement between Shiite factions over forming
a coalition.
Shortly after he
made his surprise declaration, Sadr’s followers burst into the Republican
Palace, where cabinet meetings are usually held.
Inside the
opulent palace, protesters lounged in armchairs in a meeting room, some waved
Iraqi flags and took photographs of themselves, and others cooled off in a
swimming pool in the garden, in scenes reminiscent of anti-government protests
in Sri Lanka last month.
Sadr — a
grey-bearded preacher with millions of devoted followers, who once led a
militia against
US and
Iraqi government forces — announced earlier on Monday on
Twitter he was stepping back from politics.
“I’ve decided
not to meddle in political affairs. I therefore announce now my definitive
retirement,” said Sadr, a longtime player in the war-torn country’s political
scene, though he himself has never directly been in government.
He added that
“all the institutions” linked to his
Sadrist movement will be closed, except
the mausoleum of his father, assassinated in 1999, and other heritage
facilities.
His latest
statement came two days after he said “all parties” including his own should
give up government positions in order to help resolve the political crisis.
His bloc emerged
from last year’s election as the biggest, with 73 seats, but short of a
majority. In June, his lawmakers quit in a bid to break the logjam, which led
to the Coordination Framework becoming the largest bloc in the legislature.
Since then, Sadr
has engaged in other pressure tactics, including a mass prayer by tens of
thousands of his followers on August 5.
Hamzeh Hadad,
from the
European Council on Foreign Relations, said it was “not clear” what
Sadr’s strategy was.
“Whatever it
does mean, in typical Sadrist fashion, there is always backtracking expected,”
Hadad said.
“The second, and
more terrifying thought on this is that he is giving his followers the green
light to do whatever they like.”
Millions of followers
Sadr’s supporters have been calling for parliament to be dissolved and
for new elections, but on Saturday the cleric said it was “more important” that
“all parties and figures who have been part of the political process” since the
2003 US-led invasion “no longer participate”.
“That includes
the Sadrist movement,” he said.
Over the years,
the chameleon-like Sadr has taken various positions and then reversed them.
Sadr’s
supporters have for weeks been staging a sit-in outside Iraq’s parliament,
after storming the legislature’s interior on July 30, to press their demands.
They were
angered after the
Coordination Framework nominated a candidate they saw as
unacceptable for prime minister.
The Framework
wants a new head of government to be appointed before any new polls are held.
Caretaker Prime
Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi earlier this month convened crisis talks with party
leaders, but the Sadrists boycotted.
Many Iraqis say
the political infighting has nothing to do with their day-to-day struggles.
Iraq has been
ravaged by decades of conflict and endemic corruption.
Oil-rich but
blighted by ailing infrastructure, unemployment, power cuts, and crumbling
public services, Iraq now also faces water shortages as drought ravages swathes
of the country.
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