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Saturday, October 05, 2019

'Revolution of hunger'

In what appears to be a spontaneous outburst of outrage over unemployment, poor services and corruption days of anti-government protests have convulsed the capital, Baghdad, and several other Iraqi cities. Protesters demand improved services, more jobs and an end to the corruption that analysts describe as endemic. The focus of the demonstrators' anger has been not just the government but Iraq's wider political establishment. Millions lack access to adequate healthcare, schooling, water or power supplies. Much of the country's infrastructure remains in ruins. Many government officials and lawmakers are widely accused of siphoning off public money, unfairly awarding contracts in state institutions and other forms of corruption.

Iraq has the world's fourth-largest reserves of oil, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), but nearly three-fifths of its 40 million people live on less than $6 a day.

The protests do not appear to have been coordinated by a particular political group and have seemingly cut across ethnic and sectarian lines. The protests arose in the south, heartland of the Shi'ite majority, but quickly spread, with no formal leadership. Dozens of people have been killed during clashes between demonstrators and security forces, who have attempted to disperse the protests by using live ammunition, tear gas and water cannon. Police appear to be targeting individual protesters. Reuters reporters saw one fall to the ground after being shot in the head. Elsewhere, a Reuters television crew saw a man critically wounded by a gunshot to the neck after snipers on rooftops opened fire at a crowd. He was pronounced dead in hospital. Curfews have been declared in Baghdad and the southern cities of Nasiriya, Amara, Najaf and Hilla. Authorities have also imposed a near-total internet blackout in a bid to make it harder for protesters to mobilise.

"The people are being robbed. The people are now begging on the street. There is no work, you come to protest, they fire at you.”

"We want jobs and better public services. We've been demanding them for years and the government has never responded."

"There's no electricity, no jobs, people are dying of starvation, and people are sick."

"We are not Daesh, we are peaceful protesters calling for our simple rights - why they are firing at us?”

We want to change the regime. They have arrested our people, they have done things to our people that they did not even do to Daesh - they beat them up and humiliated them while firing live gunfire. What did we do? Are we suicide bombers? We are here to call for our rights."

We are demanding our simplest rights … we sacrifice ourselves for our country, to be sacrificed for Iraq. Our people. Come out, not for yourselves, but for your children."

"All my brothers and relatives have graduated from universities but are jobless so why I should study if there is no future?"

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