Protests escalate in Baghdad as Iraqis urge reforms
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Iraqis gather at the entrance of Baghdad's heavily-fortified Green Zone to protest for reforms on April 18, 2016. (AFP photo)
Thousands gathered at the entrance of a high-security compound in the Iraqi capital Baghdad on Monday as protests continue over a delay in the parliament to endorse reforms in the government.
According to Press TV, the protest started from Baghdad’s Tahrir Square, where people have been holding a one-day sit-in, and then reached the gates of the heavily fortified Green Zone, where the government and foreign embassies are located.
There was a call over loudspeaker in Tahrir, urging people to run from the sit-in site to the Jumhuriyah Bridge which leads to the gates of the Green Zone.
The action comes less than a month after Iraqis followed an appeal by the influential Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and staged rounds of protests and sit-downs outside the Green Zone. Those protests ended after Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi presented a new cabinet line-up to parliament.
However Abadi’s bid to replace the cabinet of party-affiliated ministers with a government of technocrats has met heavy resistance in the legislature, with dominant parties still wanting affiliated figures as ministers in a bid to maintain their grip on power and wealth in Iraq.
“It is a message we want to deliver to the government and the parliament,” Ibrahim al-Jaberi, the head of Sadr's east Baghdad office said Monday, adding that the demonstrators would not try to enter the Green Zone. He said, however, that people could be quickly mobilized to gather there.
ME