Demonstrators begin gathering at Baghdad's Tahrir Square following failure of parliamentary session aimed at selecting replacement for speaker. | |||||
BAGHDAD
- Several hundred demonstrators took part in a renewed sit-in in
central Baghdad on Sunday to call for reforms, following another that
lasted for two weeks last month.
The protesters began
gathering at Baghdad's Tahrir Square on Saturday following the failure
of a parliamentary session aimed at selecting a replacement for the
speaker.
Iraq has been hit by weeks of political
turmoil surrounding Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's efforts to replace
the cabinet of party-affiliated ministers with a government of
technocrats.
"Our sit-in aims to end the political
quotas," said Mohammed Khayoun, one of the participants in the
demonstration, referring to senior government positions being shared out
among parties.
Imad Shaeet, another participant, said
that: "Our demands are for reform aimed at securing our future and the
future of our children."
Security forces closed streets around the sit-in site, causing major traffic jams in the area.
Powerful
Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr organised a two-week sit-in in March
outside Baghdad's heavily-fortified Green Zone, where the government is
headquartered, but called it off after Abadi presented a new cabinet
lineup to parliament.
The premier has faced significant
opposition to his cabinet reform efforts from powerful political
parties that rely on control of ministries for patronage and funds.
Both
the United Nations and Washington have warned that the political
wrangling could undermine Iraq's fight against the Islamic State
jihadist group, which overran large areas in 2014 but has since lost
significant ground.
Political blocs submitted their own
ministerial candidates, leading to a second lineup on which most of
Abadi's nominees were replaced.
Lawmakers then began a
sit-in at parliament, while two subsequent sessions ended in a fistfight
and a vote to remove speaker Salim al-Juburi, overshadowing the cabinet
issue.
Juburi insists the session at which MPs voted
to sack him lacked a quorum and that the decision is therefore invalid,
but his opponents say the move was legitimate.
They
attempted to hold a session on Saturday aimed at selecting replacements
for Juburi and his deputies, but it collapsed after 23 MPs from the
Shiite Badr bloc announced they would not participate, meaning it lacked
a quorum.
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Monday, 18 April 2016
Protestors hold new Baghdad sit-in to call for reforms
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