Latest update : 2016-04-30
Hundreds of supporters of Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr on Saturday stormed Baghdad's Green Zone and some entered the parliament building after lawmakers failed to convene for a vote on overhauling the government.
There were no reports of clashes with security
forces. But an army special forces unit was dispatched with armoured
vehicles to protect sensitive sites, two security officials said. No
curfew has been imposed, they said.
All entrances of Baghdad were shut “as a precautionary measure to
maintain the capital’s security,” another security official said.
A United Nations spokesman and Western diplomats based inside the Green Zone said their compounds were locked down. A U.S. embassy spokesman denied reports of evacuation.
Earlier in the day, a suicide bomber drove a truck loaded with three
tonnes of explosives into a gathering of Shi’ite pilgrims in the
southeastern Baghdad suburb of Nahrawan, killing 19 people and wounding
48 others in an attack claimed by the ultra-hardline Sunni militants.
Sharqiya TV showed Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi walking inside the
Green Zone with dozens of armed guards following the breach,
discrediting reports he had fled. Protesters later entered the nearby
cabinet headquarters.
Such a breach is unprecedented, though only a few years ago mortars
frequently rained down on the 10-square-kilometre Green Zone, which once
housed the headquarters of the U.S. occupation and before that a palace
belonging to Saddam Hussein.
Checkpoints and concrete barriers have blocked bridges and highways
leading to the neighbourhood for years, symbolising the isolation of
Iraq’s leadership from its people.
Video showed protesters attacking a white, armoured SUV with sticks
and other objects on Saturday. In separate footage, they beat a man
wearing a grey suit.
Sources in Sadr’s office said several Kurdish deputies who had been holed up inside parliament were evacuated by a Sadrist MP in his motorcade.
A Kurdish peshmerga guard at a checkpoint said the protesters surged
in after security forces pulled back from an external checkpoint in an
unsuccessful effort to secure parliament. They had not been searched
before entering the Green Zone, he said.
About ten members of the armed group loyal to Sadr were checking
protesters cursorily as government security forces who usually conduct
careful searches with bomb-sniffing dogs stood by the side, a Reuters
witness said.
Thousands more protesters remained at the gates chanting “Peaceful!”.
Some stood atop concrete blast walls that form the district’s outer
barrier.
A Sadr spokesman told Reuters the cleric called on supporters to evacuate parliament and set up tents outside.
“Negotiations are ongoing between security and government officials
and protesters’ representatives to make sure their demands are met,”
said Sheikh Muhanad al-Gharrawi.
President Fuad Massoum called on protesters to leave parliament but
added: “Burying the regime of party and sectarian quotas cannot be
delayed.”
‘Great popular uprising’
Inside parliament hundreds of protesters danced, waved Iraqi flags
and chanted pro-Sadr slogans. Some appeared to be breaking furniture.
Rudaw TV showed them chanting and taking pictures of themselves inside the main chamber where moments earlier lawmakers had met.
Parliament failed to reach quorum earlier on Saturday to complete
voting on a cabinet reshuffle proposed by Abadi after a handful of
ministers were approved on Tuesday despite disruptions by dissenting
lawmakers.
Political parties have resisted Abadi’s efforts to replace some
ministers - chosen to balance Iraq’s divisions along party, ethnic and
sectarian lines - with technocrats in order to combat corruption.
Supporters of Sadr, whose fighters once ran swathes of Baghdad and
helped defend the capital from Islamic State in 2014, have been
demonstrating in Baghdad for weeks, responding to their leader’s call to
put pressure on Abadi to follow through on months-old reform promises.
Moments before the Green Zone breach, Sadr seemed to offer an
ultimatum: “Either corrupt (officials) and quotas remain or the entire
government will be brought down and no one will be exempt from that.”
In a televised speech from the holy city of Najaf announcing a
two-month withdrawal from public life, Sadr said he was “waiting for the
great popular uprising and the major revolution to stop the march of
the corrupt.”
Abadi has warned that delays to overhauling the cabinet could hamper the war against Islamic State, which controls vast swathes of northern and western Iraq.
(REUTERS)
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