Saturday, April 20, 2024 | Shawwal 10, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
25°C / 25°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Renewed violence in Iraq as TV station suspended

1426201
1426201
minus
plus

BAGHDAD: Two Iraqis were killed and dozens wounded in protest-related violence on Tuesday, as authorities suspended a television station which has broadcast intensive coverage of the months-long movement demanding regime change.


The youth-led campaign has pressed on despite violence that has killed more than 480 people, a vast majority of them protesters, since rallies erupted in Baghdad and southern Iraq on October 1.


Demanding snap elections, an independent prime minister and accountability for long-standing corruption and bloodshed, youths have occupied squares, blockaded streets and boycotted university classes for nearly four months.


Security forces have responded with live rounds and tear gas, and on Tuesday one protester was shot dead in clashes with riot police in the southern protest hotspot of Kut, according to medical and security sources.


Further north in the capital, a professor at the famed Mustansariyah University was shot dead early on Tuesday while driving in his car, medics and police said.


Mohammad Alwan was known to have been protesting in Tahrir Square, a plaza in central Baghdad which demonstrators have transformed into an anti-government tent city.


Activists have long complained that a campaign of kidnappings and drive-by shootings has aimed to intimidate them into calling off the protests.


‘We’ll protest everyday’


Near Tahrir on Tuesday, protesters carrying makeshift shield tried to seal off roads and threw rocks at riot police firing tear gas and live rounds.


Around 15 protesters were wounded, medics said.


Other rallies and skirmishes rocked the port city of Basra in the south, as well as Amarah, Hillah and Nasiriyah.


“We came out today and we’ll protest everyday to support these protests, which are a historic challenge,” said Ajwad Ali, a university-age protester in Nasiriyah.


“We renew our demands for a new prime minister and for the new electoral law to be signed into law. If there is more procrastination, we will escalate our peaceful movement.” Political factions have thus far failed to agree on a replacement for the prime minister, Adel Abdel Mahdi, who resigned in December but has stayed on in a caretaker role.


And while parliament has passed a new law to oversee parliamentary elections, it falls short of protesters’ demands and has yet to be signed into law by the president.


The delays have infuriated protesters, and even Iraq’s top religious authority and the United Nations have criticised authorities for failing to enact reform.


The government has also come under fire for not doing enough to protect journalists in the country.


Iraqi authorities this week suspended Al-Dijla television station for a month, media and police sources said on Tuesday.


“Interior ministry forces fully shut down Al-Dijla’s offices in Baghdad last night and respectfully asked the staff to leave,” a source from the broadcaster said.


US ‘outraged’ at rockets


An interior ministry official confirmed that security forces had stormed the offices in east Baghdad late on Monday.


The Al-Dijla employee said the station’s headquarters in Amman had even been ordered by Jordanian authorities to halt broadcasting, after Iraqi authorities filed a complaint.


— AFP


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon