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Iraq: growing anti-regime protests, deadly clashes Baghdad, Oct 29 (AFP) Oct 29, 2019 Apparently spontaneous anti-government protests that started in Iraq on October 1 have escalated into deadly clashes around the country and demands for the government to resign. With at least 240 people killed in the growing movement and demonstrators camping out in Baghdad's iconic Tahrir (Liberation) Square for days, here is a recap:
Heeding calls on social media, they gather in Tahrir Square in what seems to be a spontaneous movement. Riot police disperse crowds with water cannons, tear gas and rubber bullets. They fire live ammunition when protesters regroup. The first deaths are reported.
Influential firebrand Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr, whose bloc is the biggest in parliament, announces support for "peaceful protests". On October 3, thousands defy a curfew in Baghdad and other cities, blocking streets and burning tyres. Riot police and soldiers again fire live rounds. Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi defends his year-old government on television, asking for more time to implement reforms.
Several protesters are struck by bullets. Security forces blame "unidentified snipers". In the evening, Sadr calls on the government to resign and for early elections under UN supervision.
On October 7, the powerful Hashed al-Shaabi, a network of mostly majority-Shiite paramilitary units, says it will back the government to prevent "a coup". Calm returns and Baghdad lifts security restrictions on October 8. On October 22, an official inquiry announces that the death toll from the week of protests totalled 157, most killed in Baghdad.
Protesters begin camping out at Tahrir Square. On October 25, demonstrators are out in their thousands, massing near the capital's high-security Green Zone and in other cities. Deadly violence erupts as protesters set fire to dozens of government buildings and offices belonging to the pro-government Hashed paramilitary forces across southern cities. By the evening, more than 40 protesters have been killed. Security forces impose a curfew across several southern provinces.
In the evening, lawmakers in Sadr's influential bloc, Saeroon, begin a sit-in at parliament. They align themselves with the political opposition, having been a main sponsor of the government. On October 27, students join protests in Baghdad, while four parliamentarians resign.
Trade unions representing teachers, lawyers and dentists declare strikes. Parliament votes to summon Abdel Mahdi for questioning. On October 29, the strikes and student rallies intensify after thousands defy an overnight curfew and stayed on the streets, including around Tahrir.
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