US Embassy In Baghdad Comes Under Attack; Iraqi Security Forces Kill Protester
Mon Jan 27, 2020 09:17:am World
2K By Afam Jude Offor
The US embassy in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone came under attack from rocket fire on Sunday evening. Five
rockets crashed into a riverbank near the embassy in the Iraqi capital
leaving one person injured. AFP news agency citing a security source
said three of the rockets "directly hit the US embassy". One slammed
into a cafeteria at dinner time, it added. It was the third such
attack on the US embassy this month but was the first time the complex
had been directly hit. It was not immediately clear who was responsible.
Prime
Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi swiftly condemned the attack in a statement,
calling it an "aggression" that could "drag Iraq into becoming a war
zone". Iraqi security forces shot at anti-government protesters
in Baghdad on Sunday, killing at least one person, and unidentified men
set fire to sit-in tents in a southern Iraqi city, police and medics
said, as months-long civil unrest escalated. Anti-government
protests erupted in Baghdad on Oct. 1 and quickly turned violent.
Security forces and unidentified gunmen have shot protesters dead.
Nearly 500 people have been killed in the unrest. Aleast 12
demonstrators have been killed since Saturday, the Iraqi High Commission
for Human Rights said, with three in Nasiriya, and nine in Baghdad
province. The protests are an unprecedented leaderless challenge
to Iraq’s Shi’ite Muslim-dominated and largely Iran-backed ruling elite,
which emerged after a U.S.-led invasion toppled Sunni dictator Saddam
Hussein in 2003. Demonstrators are demanding that all parties and
politicians be removed, free and fair elections be held and corruption
rooted out. The government has responded with violence and piecemeal
reform. The international community has condemned the violence but not
intervened to stop it. In Baghdad, one protester was killed,
police sources and medics said, and more than 100 others hurt across the
country after the security forces tried to clear protest camps. At
least 75 of those hurt were in the southern city of Nassariya. A
Reuters witness said protesters set fire to two security vehicles and
hundreds of other demonstrators controlled key bridges in the city.
Later, unidentified men set fire to tents that are part of a months-long
sit-in in the city centre.
Protests have flared in the last two days after populist cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, many of whose supporters had participated, said he would no longer be involved in anti-government demonstrations. Sadr opposes all foreign interference in Iraq but has aligned himself more closely in recent months with Iran and the Tehran-backed parties that dominate state institutions in Baghdad. Some demonstrators have accused the populist cleric of treachery of their cause. Sadr has organized separate anti-American demonstrations aimed at pressuring U.S. troops to leave Iraq, moves that critics say aim to eclipse the anti-establishment movement which has taken aim at all politicians including Sadr. The increase in unrest comes after Washington killed Iranian Major-General Qassem Soleimani, the mastermind of Iran’s control over Iraq, and an Iraqi paramilitary chief in a drone strike in Baghdad on Jan. 3. Iran responded with ballistic missile attacks on two Iraqi military bases, but the killing has revived tensions in Iraqi politics and delayed the formation of a new government. Five Katyusha rockets hit Baghdad’s Green Zone, which houses government buildings and foreign embassies, late on Sunday, a military statement said. It did not report casualties.
‘INTERNAL STRIFE’
Security sources told Reuters that at least one rocket landed inside the U.S. embassy compound and wounded three people. If confirmed, it would be the first time in years that such attacks on the Green Zone, which are regular, have actually hurt staff there. Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi condemned the attack in a statement from his office, and said that the continuation of such acts could “drag Iraq into becoming a battlefield.” Sadr had called for demonstrations against the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad and other cities on Sunday but cancelled them, with his office giving “avoiding internal strife” as the reason. Sadr’s supporters had bolstered anti-government protests before the assassination of Soleimani but have since been directed by their leader to focus their anger against America. They began withdrawing from anti-government sit-in camps on Saturday. We protest because we have a cause. I don’t think Moqtada Sadr or any other politician will change our mind,” said a protester in Baghdad who declined to give his name. I don’t go to protests often but I came out today because of what they did yesterday. I want to express my solidarity with my brothers in Tahrir,” said Hussain Ali, a student, referring to demonstrations in Tahrir Square, the main area of protests in the capital. In Baghdad, protesters were coughing and washing their faces and eyes to rid themselves of the effects of tear gas while medical workers provided first aid, as the site was inaccessible to ambulances, a Reuters reporter said. Tuk tuks evacuated wounded protesters in clouds of tear gas and black smoke from burning tyres. Earlier on Sunday, hundreds of university students had gathered in Tahrir Square, the main protest camp, chanting slogans against the United States and Iran. Protests also continued in the cities of Kerbala, Najaf and Diwaniya, defying attempts by security forces to end their months-long sit-in, police sources and Reuters witnesses said.
Protests have flared in the last two days after populist cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, many of whose supporters had participated, said he would no longer be involved in anti-government demonstrations. Sadr opposes all foreign interference in Iraq but has aligned himself more closely in recent months with Iran and the Tehran-backed parties that dominate state institutions in Baghdad. Some demonstrators have accused the populist cleric of treachery of their cause. Sadr has organized separate anti-American demonstrations aimed at pressuring U.S. troops to leave Iraq, moves that critics say aim to eclipse the anti-establishment movement which has taken aim at all politicians including Sadr. The increase in unrest comes after Washington killed Iranian Major-General Qassem Soleimani, the mastermind of Iran’s control over Iraq, and an Iraqi paramilitary chief in a drone strike in Baghdad on Jan. 3. Iran responded with ballistic missile attacks on two Iraqi military bases, but the killing has revived tensions in Iraqi politics and delayed the formation of a new government. Five Katyusha rockets hit Baghdad’s Green Zone, which houses government buildings and foreign embassies, late on Sunday, a military statement said. It did not report casualties.
‘INTERNAL STRIFE’
Security sources told Reuters that at least one rocket landed inside the U.S. embassy compound and wounded three people. If confirmed, it would be the first time in years that such attacks on the Green Zone, which are regular, have actually hurt staff there. Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi condemned the attack in a statement from his office, and said that the continuation of such acts could “drag Iraq into becoming a battlefield.” Sadr had called for demonstrations against the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad and other cities on Sunday but cancelled them, with his office giving “avoiding internal strife” as the reason. Sadr’s supporters had bolstered anti-government protests before the assassination of Soleimani but have since been directed by their leader to focus their anger against America. They began withdrawing from anti-government sit-in camps on Saturday. We protest because we have a cause. I don’t think Moqtada Sadr or any other politician will change our mind,” said a protester in Baghdad who declined to give his name. I don’t go to protests often but I came out today because of what they did yesterday. I want to express my solidarity with my brothers in Tahrir,” said Hussain Ali, a student, referring to demonstrations in Tahrir Square, the main area of protests in the capital. In Baghdad, protesters were coughing and washing their faces and eyes to rid themselves of the effects of tear gas while medical workers provided first aid, as the site was inaccessible to ambulances, a Reuters reporter said. Tuk tuks evacuated wounded protesters in clouds of tear gas and black smoke from burning tyres. Earlier on Sunday, hundreds of university students had gathered in Tahrir Square, the main protest camp, chanting slogans against the United States and Iran. Protests also continued in the cities of Kerbala, Najaf and Diwaniya, defying attempts by security forces to end their months-long sit-in, police sources and Reuters witnesses said.
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