Snow in Baghdad, About 700 Iraqi Protesters
Killed, About 25,000 in Four Months
February 12, 2020
Editor's Note:
Iraqis, both Sunnis and Shi'is, are fed-up with the US-installed
corrupt regime, they are in full revolt against it, demanding it to be
thrown out (regime change by people).
|
|
Iraq’s capital of
Baghdad was carpeted with a rare snowfall Tuesday, February
11, 2020 (protesters mending their tent). |
Iraq’s capital Baghdad has woken up to snow for the first time
in more than a decade, February 11, 2020 |
The following are news stories from the independent Iraqi
Arabic news agency, Yaqein ( http://yaqein.net/
):
***
One Iraqi protester killed, 2 Injured, 2 Abducted
One protester was killed, two were injured by Iraqi security
forces in Nassiriya. Moreover, two activists were abducted in
Baghdad and Najaf. In addition, two security officers were
injured in Baghdad when protesters threw Molotov bottles on
them. So far, about 700 protesters were killed and about 25,000
injured since October 2019.
حقوق الإنسان: مقتل متظاهر
واختطاف ناشطين اثنين بالساعات الـ 48 الأخيرة
11 فبراير
2020 ، يقين
أعلنت مفوضية
حقوق الإنسان في العراق اليوم الثلاثاء عن حصيلة جديدة لضحايا
التظاهرات في بغداد والعديد من المحافظات خلال اليومين الماضيين.
وقالت المفوضية في بيان: إن “فرقها تواصل رصد ما رافق التظاهرات
خلال اليومين الماضيين في بغداد وباقي المحافظات وتعرب عن أسفها
الشديد لاستمرار العنف والتصادمات بين القوات الامنية والمتظاهرين
في بعضها”. وأكد بيان المفوضية مقتل متظاهر واصابة اثنين آخرين
بنيران القوات الأمنية في محافظة ذي قار، وذلك بأحداث جامعة العين
في مدينة الناصرية.
وسجلت
المفوضية اختطاف اثنين من الناشطين في العاصمة بغداد ومحافظة
النجف، مبينة أن اثنين من القوات الامنية أصيبوا في منطقة ساحة
الوثبة في بغداد اثر قيام عدد من الأشخاص باستخدام قنابل المولوتوف
والقنابل ضد القوات الامنية. وطالبت المفوضية القوات الأمنية
والمتظاهرين إلى التعاون والتنسيق وفرز المسيئين الذين يحاولون حرف
التظاهرات عن سلميتها والبقاء في الاماكن المحددة للتظاهر وتجنب
الاحتكاك مع القوات الأمنية وحماية الممتلكات العامة والخاصة.
وبحسب المركز العراقي لتوثيق جرائم الحرب فإن عدد ضحايا التظاهرات
العراقية منذ انطلاقها تجاوز الـ 700 قتيل وأكثر من 25 ألف مصاب.
https://yaqein.net/politics/2435
|
***
The following are news stories from the independent Iraqi
English news site, (https://www.thebaghdadpost.com/en):
***
More than 100 US soldiers suffer brain injury after Iran
attacks on US bases in Iraq
The Baghdad Post, February 10, 2020
The US military is preparing to report a more than 50 percent
jump in the number of cases of traumatic brain injury stemming from
Iran's missile attack on a base in
Iraq last month, US officials told Reuters on Monday.
The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said there
were now over 100 cases of TBI, up from the 64 that had been previously
reported last month.
The Pentagon declined to comment.
Militant group targets supply convoy south of Baghdad:
military statement
The Baghdad Post, February 10, 2020
Militants on Monday targeted a convoy carrying food supplies south of
Baghdad using an explosive device, the Iraqi military said in a
statement, leading to only material losses.
Lebanese pro-Iranian
TV channel al-Mayadeen reported that the explosion targeted a convoy
carrying military equipment to a base hosting U.S. forces south of the
capital. The channel said there was damage to one vehicle but no
casualties.
The report comes amid heightened tension between
(Iraqi paramiliament) and the United States in Iraq. Washington killed
top Iranian commander Qassem Soleimani in a drone strike last month and
Tehran fired missiles at two bases hosting U.S. forces in retaliation
days later.
Iraqi Forces Capture IS Commander near Mosul
The Baghdad Post, February 11, 2020
Iraqi intelligence and security forces on
Monday captured a commander of the Islamic State (IS) in north of
the country, near the city of
Mosul in
Nineveh province.
Department of Military Intelligence of Iraq
issued a statement to confirm the arrest of the commander of Islamic
State’s air defense division.
According to the statement, the
IS commander was captured at a security checkpoint near
Mosul after days of monitoring his movements.
The unnamed
IS commander was previously issued an arrest warrant by a court in
Baghdad.
NATO willing to expand Iraqi training mission to meet Trump
demand
The Baghdad Post, February 11, 2020
NATO is considering an increase to its training mission in
Iraq to relieve the burden on the U.S.-led coalition against ISIS,
senior officials and diplomats said on Tuesday.
NATO defense
ministers including U.S. Secretary of State Mark Esper will discuss
options for non-combat operations in the Middle East at a two-day
meeting in Brussels starting on Wednesday,
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said.
“We are
discussing what more
NATO can do,” he told reporters, adding that the alliance would
first seek to restart the training with the Iraqi government’s
blessing.
U.S. Ambassador to
NATO Kay Bailey Hutchison said the alliance was also seeking
military advice, both from
NATO and Iraq, on how to increase the mission, but gave no details.
“I think it will definitely be the answer to what President Trump
has requested,” she said.
NATO and the coalition have non-combat
“train-and-advise” missions which aim to develop Iraqi security forces
but both are suspended over fears for regional stability after a U.S.
drone strike killed a top Iranian commander in Baghdad on Jan. 3.
After the killing, U.S. President
Donald Trump called on
NATO - founded in 1949 to contain a military threat from the Soviet
Union - to do more in the Middle East but he has not specified publicly
what that might entail.
Why Iraq's youthful protests endure
The Baghdad Post, February 12, 2020
Iraq’s capital of
Baghdad was carpeted with a rare snowfall Tuesday.
It
brought people onto the streets to make snowmen together and join in
friendly snowball fights.
The collective experience was an apt
reflection of the past four months in Iraq. Since Oct. 1, tens of
thousands of young people have maintained nonviolent and leaderless
protests in major cities, hoping to redefine the meaning of community
for Iraq.
So far, despite the killing of more than 500
demonstrators, neither the protesters nor their shared vision has melted
away.
With nearly half of Iraqis under age 21, the protesters
are as difficult to ignore as are their idealistic aims.
They
focus on creating a secular state that respects civic rights and an end
to a type of government in which power and oil wealth are divvied up by
religious and ethnic groups. They also want foreign powers (namely Iran)
to stop meddling in Iraqi affairs.
Such aims are similar to those raised during months of protests in
nearby Lebanon. In both countries, the uprising has led to the downfall
of a prime minister and an uneasy tension with the political elite over
who will run government.
In Iraq, the protesters have a
powerful ally, the revered Shiite cleric Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. He
has called for an end to the killing of protesters and for free and fair
elections “as soon as possible.” A new government, he says, must earn
the people’s trust.
Because of Iraq’s pivotal position in the
Middle East, its protests may be the most significant of the many
youthful protests that erupted worldwide in 2019 from Chile to Algeria
to Hong Kong.
If one element binds these grassroots movements,
it has been the rejection of how governments have been organized and an
embrace of inclusive democracy based on universal principles.
In a speech Monday, Achim Steiner, administrator of the United
Nations Development Program, described this global trend in its broadest
meaning:
“From the grassroots, to the business communities, to
people voting with their feet in protest, mature democracies and
autocracies alike are experiencing a new form of community today – a new
form of people power – representing a profound shift in the global
landscape of collaboration and dissent....
“We once thought of a
community as a group of people who live in the same geographic area, or
who share socio-economic, ethnic, linguistic, or religious
characteristics.
The evolving global context, including the
extent to which new technologies have empowered communication and
information-sharing at the individual-level, requires
us to embrace a far wider definition.
“Many communities that drive change now cut across the boundaries of
class, geography, language, religion, political orientation, and
identity. They do not ‘respect’ the typologies of the past.
“What binds them together is shared experience, understanding, belief,
and common visions and ways of working.”
His explanation helps justify the close attention to the protests in
Iraq. A new meaning of community may be forming, one that could reshape
a troubled region. Like a blanket of snow, young Iraqis are bringing a
country together in a way it rarely experiences.
https://www.thebaghdadpost.com/en/Story/46033/Why-Iraq-s-youthful-protests-endure
Iraqis in Baghdad wake up to snow for first time in over a
decade
The Baghdad Post, February 12, 2020
The last time Iraq’s capital experienced
snow was in 2008.
Iraq’s capital
Baghdad has woken up to
snow for the first time in more than a decade.
Iraq has
grappled with months of unrest, beginning with an anti-government
protest movement which engulfed the country in October, and the US
killing of a top Iranian general in
Baghdad in early January, which brought the region close to war amid
soaring US-Iran tensions.
Over 500 people have died in the
protests as security forces used live rounds and tear gas to disperse
crowds in
Baghdad and southern Iraq.
The movement is entering a
critical phase, after influential Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who
initially threw his weight behind demonstrators, withdrew it. Tensions
have since seethed between protesters and Mr al-Sadr’s followers.
In the city’s central Tahrir Square, the epicentre of the protest
movement, protesters took a moment to observe the snowfall and dusted
the flakes off their sit-in tents.
Annual snowfall is common in
the mountainous northern region of Iraq, but very rare in Baghdad. The
last time the capital saw
snow was in 2008.
https://www.thebaghdadpost.com/en/Story/46028/Iraqis-in-Baghdad-wake-up-to-snow-for-first-time-in-over-a-decade
***
Share the link of this article with your facebook friends