Protester killed as fresh clashes erupt in Iraq despite cleric’s plea

More than 280 killed since protests over lack of jobs and services began on October 1st

Anti-government protesters throw stones at security forces during clashes in the al-Rasheed street in Baghdad on Friday.  Photograph: Khalid Mohammed/AP
Anti-government protesters throw stones at security forces during clashes in the al-Rasheed street in Baghdad on Friday. Photograph: Khalid Mohammed/AP

Fresh clashes between Iraqi security forces and anti-government protesters broke out in Baghdad on Friday, killing one person, despite a call for calm by the country's top Shia cleric, as authorities grapple with the country's biggest crisis in years.

Security forces fired tear gas and threw stun grenades into crowds of protesters wearing helmets and makeshift body armour on a main road in the middle of the Iraqi capital, sending demonstrators scattering, some wounded.

One protester died from a tear gas canister fired directly into his head, a witness said.

More than 280 people have been killed, according to police and medics, since the protests over a lack of jobs and services began in Baghdad on October 1st and quickly spread to southern provinces.

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Police, the military and paramilitary groups have used live gunfire against mostly unarmed protesters since the beginning of the unrest.

Enormous influence

Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, who only speaks on politics in times of crisis and wields enormous influence over public opinion in Shia-majority Iraq, held security forces accountable for any violent escalation and urged the government to respond as quickly as possible to demonstrators' demands.

He says he's supporting protests and that we should keep going, but he hasn't helped

“The biggest responsibility is on the security forces,” a representative of Ayatollah Sistani said in a sermon after Friday prayers in the holy city of Karbala. “They must avoid using excessive force with peaceful protesters.”

Protesters, some of whom view Ayatollah Sistani as part of the political and religious system they say is the cause of many Iraqis’ misery, took little solace from the cleric’s words.

“He says he’s supporting protests and that we should keep going, but he hasn’t helped. The speech won’t make a difference either way,” said one woman protesting in Baghdad whose son was killed in recent clashes.

“I’m the mother of a student. They took his life,” she said, giving her name as Umm al-Shaheed, Arabic for mother of the martyr.

The demonstrators, mostly unemployed youths, demand an overhaul of the political system and a corrupt ruling class which has dominated state institutions since the US-led overthrow of Saddam Hussein in 2003.

In the southern city of Basra, where at least four people were killed as security forces cleared a sit-in on Thursday, another attempt was made to disperse hundreds of protesters near the local government headquarters, police said.

Public anger

The violent response from authorities has fuelled public anger. Live fire is still being used and even tear gas canisters, fired directly at protesters’ bodies instead of being lobbed into crowds, have killed at least 16 people, New York-based Human Rights Watch said on Friday.

Doctors at hospitals have shown reporters scans of tear gas canisters embedded in the skulls of dead protesters.

Ayatollah Sistani warned against the exploitation of the unrest by “internal and external” forces which he said sought to destabilise Iraq for their own goals. He did not elaborate.

Officials and analysts fear that militants could exploit unrest to sow more chaos in Iraq, which has suffered decades of conflict, sanctions and corrupt governance.

Late on Friday the military said 17 rockets had landed near a base hosting US forces in northern Iraq. It did not say who was believed to be behind the attack.

The US blamed Iran-backed militia for rocket attacks on other bases in May this year but US forces are also involved in a fight against Islamic State militants. – Reuters