Iraq Protests Update: Everything You Need To Know About The Civil Unrest In Baghdad’s Green Zone
Supporters of cleric Moqtada al-Sadr gather after breaking into Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, April 30, 2016.
Photo: Ahmad al-Rubaye/AFP/Getty Images
An Iraqi man holds a national flag as protesters gather outside the
Parliament building in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, April 30,
2016.
Photo: Haidar Mohammed Ali/AFP/Getty Images
Followers of Iraq's Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr are seen in the
parliament building as they storm Baghdad's Green Zone after lawmakers
failed to convene for a vote on overhauling the government, in Iraq
April 30, 2016.
Photo: Reuters/Ahmed Saad
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UPDATE: 3:53 p.m. EDT — Iraqi politicians who were trapped as angry protesters stormed the Parliament in Baghdad hours earlier have been freed, Rudaw reported Saturday.
Around 70 of them, including both Kurdish and Sunni parliamentary
members, arrived to the semiautonomous Kurdish region, where some voiced
concerns to reporters over the latest developments in the capital city.
“[Supporters of Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr] constitute 8 to 9
percent of the Parliament, and they want to impose their idea on the
rest of the Parliament, which is impossible,” Khasro Goran, a member of
the Kurdistan Democratic Party, said as he landed at the Erbil
International Airport. “They have scared people many times saying that
they will attack the Parliament.”
The protests come as the prominent cleric has called for a major
government overhaul amid rising complaints of rampant corruption. The
protesters slowly left the Parliament building Saturday and set up tents
nearby, as some chanted, “The cowards ran away!” referring to the
fleeing politicians, Reuters reported.
Around a dozen people were wounded Saturday, the news agency reported, quoting the police. Original story:
Protesters stormed Baghdad's highly fortified Green Zone, overtook
the country's Parliament and beat lawmakers with Iraqi flags as they
hurried out the building Saturday. Outside the heavily guarded
area, police fired tear gas at demonstrators, the streets into Baghdad
were closed, and a state of emergency was declared. All the while, the
country's prime minister, Haider al-Abadi, sought to assure his
compatriots the situation was under control.
Reports indicated protesters were slowly leaving Parliament
Saturday evening but continued camping outside. They were reportedly
planning a sit-in by the Triumphal Arch at the center of the Green Zone.
The protests come as supporters of the prominent Shiite cleric
Muqtada al-Sadr have demanded an overhaul in government amid growing
anger over corruption. Under mounting pressure, Abadi has partially reshuffled the Parliament but
has been set back by a deeply fractured and resistant government. Just
moments before protesters stormed the Green Zone on Saturday, news broke
that a vote to further change up the Parliament had been postponed
until next week.
Followers
of Iraq's Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr are seen in the Parliament
building following their storming Baghdad's Green Zone after lawmakers
failed to convene for a vote on overhauling the government, April 30,
2016.
Photo: Reuters/Ahmed Saad
Abadi called on protesters to return to designated demonstration
areas — though there was little sign they were obeying. Some called it a
"revolution" and seemed resolute to push until they saw major changes.
“This is a new era in the history of Iraq,” a demonstrator yelled in the Parliament’s lobby, the Washington Post reported, citing footage on Iraqi television. “They have been robbing us for the past 13 years,” another activist said.
Many read into the protests as reaction to momentous failure in
governance over the past decade. The Green Zone was set up to protect
U.S. forces stationed in Iraq after the 2003 American invasion that
ousted Sadam Hussein, and today it is the site of many Iraqi ministries
and foreign embassies. For the Shiite activists, it has been portrayed
as a bastion of corruption; about a mile away from the Parliament sits
the U.S. Embassy.
Followers
of Iraq's Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr storm Baghdad's Green Zone
after lawmakers failed to convene for a vote on overhauling the
government, April 30, 2016.
Photo: Reuters/Khalid al Mousily
Activists have demanded an end to the quota system that requires
positions to be shared between sects, and Sadr has called for new
technocrats to replace current ministers. Transparency International ranks Iraq as 161 of 168 countries in its 2015 corruption index.
U.S. and Iraqi officials alike have expressed concern that
instability in Baghdad could hinder the fight against the Islamic State
group. Yet the Shiite organizers, whose movement is harshly opposed to
the Sunni extremist group, also known as ISIS, have directed protesters
to remain peaceful. As some ransacked the Parliament, others tried to
rein them in, yelling, "Peacefully, peacefully!"
The man behind the movement is a 42-year-old cleric
who rose to prominence in 2003. His militia, the now-disbanded Mahdi
Army, fought against U.S. troops and was faulted with further inflaming a
sectarian conflict. But in recent years, as he has gone mostly quiet,
also encouraging moderation and peace, and some of his followers have
taken positions in Parliament. His current movement is popular
particularly among the country's poorest Shiites.
Prominent Iraqi Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr speaks during news conference in Najaf, south of Baghdad, April 30, 2016.
Photo: Reuters/Alaa Al-Marjani
Last month, Sadr entered the Green Zone on his own,
instructing his supporters to remain peaceful outside its gates. A
security official kissed his hand as he entered the area off limits to
most Iraqis, underscoring the outspoken critic's widespread appeal. He
warned then that his supporters would storm the area if the political
demands were not met.
“What happened today was an explosion of the people,” said
Hussain al-Sharifi, a parliamentarian with Sadr’s bloc, the Washington
Post reported Saturday. “Today was an uprising, a revolution.”
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