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As Iraq Becomes Iran-Like
Inter Press Service ^ | April 4, 2013 | Karlos Zurutuza

Posted on 04/05/2013 1:22:29 AM PDT by Colonel Kangaroo

MOSUL, Iraq, Apr 4 2013 (IPS) - Armoured vehicles and thousands of soldiers masked in black balaclavas guard the entrance to the city of Mosul, 350 kilometres northwest of Baghdad. Arriving here gives one the unmistakable feeling of entering a territory that is still under occupation – only this time, the Iraqi Federal soldiers, not the U.S. military, play the role of the occupying army, locals tell IPS.

Once a key trading post on the fabled Silk Road, Iraq’s second largest city was known for centuries for its high quality marble, and for having revolutionised 18th century Parisian fashion through the supply of its most emblematic product: muslin.

But the beginning of the 21st century brought dramatic changes to this city on the banks of the Tigris River. Trapped in the deadly crossfire between foreign Islamists, local insurgents and Western occupiers for a decade, the capital of the Nineveh region is now the scene of some of the largest anti-government demonstrations Iraq has seen since 2003.

Since last December, speeches and prayers have been strung between large communal meals and public tea rituals in Ahrar Square, in downtown Mosul. The same picture is also recurrent in Anbar and Salahadin, regions of Iraq where Sunni Arabs are in the majority, and where protests reach their peak every Friday.

“The federal police seal the bridges over the Tigris and thoroughly check those individuals that make it in to the square,” Ghanem Alabed, coordinator of the protests in Mosul, told IPS.

“They confiscate tents, blankets, mats … We have to pray on the (hard) ground because even our small prayer rugs are taken away. They try their best to (uproot) the camp but we still manage to sleep in the square every night.”

Being one of the most visible faces of the protests, Alabed has received both threats and bribes from Baghdad. He says he’s not the only one.

“Can you see those men on the roof of that house?” he asks, pointing towards a nearby building. “Those are cops and they spend the day taking pictures of the protesters to identify them afterwards.”

But preventing the outpouring of popular discontent through intimidation is practically impossible, as protesters — children and old men, the unemployed and the salaried, senior politicians and tribal leaders — gather in the tens of thousands every Friday.

The protestors say their grievances are many, but most revolve around the ethnic marginalisation of the majority Sunni population by predominantly Shia political leaders.

“Iran is ruling Iraq today,” Sheikh Safed Maula, a clan leader clad in a black cloak and red turban, told IPS. “Baghdad is in the hands of the Safavids (a name that designates the Persian Shia Muslims), whereas Sunnis walk to prison in line,” he said, referring to the mass detention of Sunnis on what rights groups say are flimsy charges.

Atheel al Nujaifi, governor of the Nineveh province and leading member of Iraqiya, the major opposition bloc in the Iraqi Parliament, is a regular face among the crowds in Ahrar Square.

“Other than the most basic demands like water, electricity and jobs, all these people are here to denounce the abuses they are constantly suffering at the hands of Baghdad,” the political leader tells IPS

Though Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has attempted to remove him on several occasions, al Nujaifi continues to espouse his views.

“The government in Baghdad must fall,” he claims. “There’s no other chance for the whole country.”

Peaceful protests – for now

“We want electricity”, “Put Maliki in prison”, “Iran out of Iraq” – such are the shouted slogans that ring out over the columns of protestors sporting Iraqi flags.

Similar demands can be read on huge banners hanging from a building still under construction next to the square.

In this heavily militarised zone, the press are also under attack.

Reporters at the daily newspaper ‘Iraqion’ said they faced constant harassment while doing their job in Ahrar Square.

“The police often seize our cameras and pester us,” a journalist who wished to remain anonymous for security reasons told IPS, stressing that this is “one of the most dangerous cities for journalists in the world”.

According to local sources 43 journalists have been killed in Mosul since the invasion in 2003.

The scale of the protests in Mosul, as well as in Fallujah and Ramadi – 60 and 110 kilometres west of Baghdad respectively – is such that al-Maliki has denounced them as the work of “foreign agents”.

Anti-government protests gained momentum in mid-December, when several bodyguards of Finance Minister Rafie al-Issawi, the highest-ranking Sunni Arab in the cabinet, were arrested.

From that point on, tensions have been on the rise. On Jan. 25, Iraqi soldiers opened fire on demonstrators in Fallujah, killing nine people. On Mar. 8, the federal police shot one demonstrator in Mosul and wounded several others.

Ghanim al Sabawi, a local doctor, was one of the many witnesses to the incident.

“We had to treat the wounded in the square because the police prevented ambulances from evacuating the injured,” recalls this activist-cum-medical professional, who has spent almost every single night in the square since the protests began in late 2012.

Protest spokesman Salem al Jubury brands such incidents a “clear (attempt) by the security forces to criminalise the protests and arrest our people”.

On Mar. 20, the government in Baghdad decided to postpone the provincial elections scheduled for April in Anbar and Nineveh. Special Representative of the U.N. Secretary-General for Iraq, Martin Kobler, denounced the move, adding, “There is no democracy without elections.”

“The government has lost popularity and intimidation remains its only answer to our plight. Our protests started last December with very humble demands but those are becoming (increasingly) political over time,” al Jubury told IPS.

Experts point out that the demonstrations have been gaining momentum alongside the war in neighbouring Syria, an explosive combination that many fear could put the country on the brink of a civil conflict, a scenario that the Mosul protests’ spokesman does not dismiss.

“We will keep our peaceful struggle in the square until the collapse of the regime in Baghdad,” al Jubury said. “If there are no changes, all options will remain open in the short term.”


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: caliphate; iran; iraq; jihad; kurdistan; mosul; rop; syria; waronterror
It's hard to say whether the biggest winner in the Iraq War was Osama bin-Laden or Mahmoud Amhadinejad.
1 posted on 04/05/2013 1:22:29 AM PDT by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: Colonel Kangaroo
The protestors say their grievances are many, but most revolve around the ethnic marginalisation of the majority Sunni population by predominantly Shia political leaders.

Very misleading article.

The "majority Sunni population" of Iraq is actually at most 20% of the population, though they had dominated Iraq since the time of the Ottoman conquest in 1534. Mosul is majority Sunni Arab, but not Iraq.

60% or so of Iraqis are Shia Arabs, with the remaining 20% Kurds, who are more or less outside the Iraqi Arab feud between Shia and Sunni.

The author here is trying to imply that the protestors are unhappy that their majority is oppressed, when what they really want is for their minority to return to its centuries-long position of oppressing the others.

2 posted on 04/05/2013 2:19:12 AM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: Sherman Logan
I think you make good points. In that part of the world, the Shia have generally been the underdogs throughout history.
3 posted on 04/05/2013 3:19:10 AM PDT by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

Once Syria falls...the Sunnis will join forces and enter Iraq and continue the violence east...and if the US isn’t careful - and supports the current leadership in Iraq, then the support will go for Iranian influence and dominance. Oh what a mess we made by not making sure there was a balance of power that would go against Iran and not for it!


4 posted on 04/05/2013 3:41:13 AM PDT by BCW (http://babylonscovertwar.com/index.html)
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

Yes, they’re sorting out the biggest winner of the Iraq War; I think its fairly clear who was the biggest loser of that conflict. One thing it did prove was that all people with a Yale undergraduate degree and a Harvard MBA are not intelligent.


5 posted on 04/05/2013 4:17:44 AM PDT by laconic
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

The writer has a Christian first name in many of these reports comming out of the middle east reporters who are either sunni or shite have no qualms about inserting their agenda. Because the source may be Christian his report may have some merit.At first I thought this may be about the Kurds who have had some contention about Mosul.

In any event if the place (Iraq) does start to fall apart will the zero regime implement the Plugs (Joe Biden) solution ?


6 posted on 04/05/2013 6:33:33 AM PDT by mosesdapoet (A voice crying in the wilderness make straight for the way of the Lord..)
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To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Berosus; bigheadfred; Bockscar; ColdOne; Convert from ECUSA; ...
“Iran is ruling Iraq today,” Sheikh Safed Maula, a clan leader clad in a black cloak and red turban, told IPS. “Baghdad is in the hands of the Safavids (a name that designates the Persian Shia Muslims), whereas Sunnis walk to prison in line,” he said, referring to the mass detention of Sunnis on what rights groups say are flimsy charges.
Hey, he had his chance to get behind the political reforms imposed by the US, now he gets to taste his own blood. The sooner the civil war in Syria concludes, the sooner the civil war / Arab-Iranian war can begin in Iraq.


7 posted on 04/06/2013 10:11:08 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Romney would have been worse, if you're a dumb ass.)
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