AFP/ Baghdad
Thousands of Iraqis took to the streets of Baghdad yesterday in counter-protests as rival supporters of cleric Moqtada Sadr extended their occupation of parliament into a third day. Almost 10 months after Iraqis went to the polls, a political standoff pits two key factions of the Shia political scene, between the populist Sadr with a devoted following of millions, and the powerful Coordination Framework.
“The people will not allow a coup,” read placards held by supporters of the Coordination Framework as they gathered on a main street leading to the Green Zone, the home of parliament, which Sadr’s supporters have been occupying since Saturday. “It is the parliament of the people, of all Iraqis, not the parliament of a select group,” said 25-year-old protester Ahmed Ali, condemning “the storming” of government institutions.
Police fired water cannon at crowds in a bid to prevent them from crossing a bridge leading to the Green Zone, inside which thousands of Sadr supporters maintained their protests, waving flags and carrying placards of their leader. Sadr’s supporters on Saturday breached the normally high-security Green Zone – also home to government buildings and embassies – in protest at the prime ministerial nomination by the Coordination Framework.
On social media, followers of the Coordination Framework urged supporters not to enter the Green Zone, saying their objective was to “defend the state and its legitimacy”. In multi-confessional and multi-ethnic Iraq, government formation has involved complex negotiations since a 2003 US-led invasion toppled dictator Saddam Hussein. In this case, the protracted political deadlock has left the country without a government, a new prime minister or a new president. Sadr’s massive mobilisation of supporters in recent weeks has underscored the political clout of the preacher, who once led a militia against American and Iraqi government forces.
The Co-ordination Framework alliance includes lawmakers from the party of Sadr’s longtime foe, ex-prime minister Nuri al-Maliki. It also represents the powerful former paramilitary alliance Hashed al-Shaabi, now integrated into the regular forces. Hadi al-Ameri, who heads a faction of the Hashed, repeated a call on Monday for “constructive dialogue enabling solutions to be found to points of contention”.
He warned against “an atmosphere of media escalation, sparked by statements and counter-statements calling for mass mobilisations that could get out of control and lead to violence”.
Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani said Tehran respects “the choice of the Iraqi people”, and that “dialogue is the best way to solve the internal problems of Iraq”.
Sadr’s 73 lawmakers had made up the biggest group of parliament’s 329 lawmakers, but they were unable to cobble together a government.
In June they quit, a move that made their rivals the largest bloc in the legislature. But the Sadrist camp was outraged by the Co-ordination Framework’s recent nomination of former minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani for premier, prompting them to occupy parliament on July 30 for the second time last week. On Sunday, the mercurial Sadr called on “everyone… to support the reformist revolutionaries”.
He lauded a “spontaneous revolution in the Green Zone — a first step”, he said, towards “an extraordinary opportunity for a fundamental change”.
The Co-ordination Framework described the appeal as “a call for a coup against the people, the state and its institutions”. In the legislature’s entrance hall on Monday, followers of Sadr chanted slogans.
“We want to get rid of the government of the corrupt,” said protester Zaher al-Atabi. “From 2003 until now, those who have run the country have done nothing to develop public services, no health system, no education.”
But while the cleric’s supporters see him as cracking down on graft, Sadrist supporters hold posts at the highest levels of government ministries — and opponents accuse them of being just as corrupt as Iraq’s other political forces.