protests hit southern Iraq

protests hit southern Iraq
Protesters flooded the streets of southern Iraq again on Sunday (August 5), nearly a month into a wave of unrest over corruption and decaying public services, AFP correspondents said.

In oil-rich Basra, the southern port city where the protests broke out on July 8, tribal chiefs and Shiite religious leaders joined several hundred demonstrators in front of the provincial headquarters.

security forces of the Iraqi regime were deployed en masse as demonstrators railed against chronic power cuts, water shortages and endemic unemployment.

While there were no clashes over the weekend, fourteen people have been killed since the unrest flared, including at least one person shot dead.

In Samawa, further west, protestors have been staging a sit-in for more than a week, condemning the misappropriation of billions of dollars from the state budget over recent years.

But the initially large protests have dwindled, apparently weakened by numerous arrests and a heavy security presence.

Anti-corruption rallies have also hit Baghdad’s central Tahrir Square, but they too have waned to just a few dozen protestors.

Prime Minster Haider al-Abadi on July 29 sacked Electricity Minister Qassem al-Fahdawi, whose departure had been demanded by demonstrators.

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