Iraqi protesters storming the Green Zone in Baghdad (Image: Ahram Online) |
Ahram Online -BAGHDAD: Hundreds of protesters climbed over the blast walls surrounding
Baghdad's highly-fortified Green Zone for the first time on Saturday and
stormed into parliament, carrying Iraqi flags and chanting against the
government.
The breach
marked a major escalation in the country's political crisis following months of
anti-government protests, sit-ins and demonstrations by supporters of
influential Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
The Green Zone
is home to most ministries and foreign embassies and has long been the focus of
al-Sadr's criticism of the government.
Earlier
Saturday, al-Sadr accused Iraqi politicians of blocking political reforms aimed
at combating corruption and waste. While al-Sadr didn't call for an escalation
to the protests, shortly after his remarks, his supporters began scaling the
compound's walls.
A group of young
men then pulled down a section of concrete blast walls to cheers from the crowd
of thousands gathered in the streets outside.
Cellphone video
uploaded to social media showed dozens of young men running through the halls
of parliament, chanting slogans in support of al-Sadr and calling for the
government to disband.
"We are all
with you (al-Sadr)," one group of men yelled as the entered the building's
main chamber.
Other videos
showed a group of young men slapping an Iraqi lawmaker as he attempted to flee
the crowd, and protesters mobbing another lawmaker's motorcade inside the Green
Zone. The footage appeared authentic and corresponded with The Associated
Press' reporting.
Iraqi forces
tightened security across the capital, sealing off checkpoints leading to the
Green Zone and halting traffic on main roads heading into the city, according
to the Baghdad Operations Command.
But Iraq's elite
counterterrorism forces, who have in the past been called on to reinforce
security in the capital, say they are standing down for now. Police and troops
appeared to be taking no action against the protesters.
"We still
view this as a demonstration," said Sabah al-Numan, spokesman for the
counterterrorism forces. "We aren't taking any part in this as it's not
something regarding terrorism."
He added,
however, that if the unrest escalates his forces may be forced to intervene to
"protect the legitimacy of the government."
Increasingly
tense protests and a series of failed reform measures have paralyzed Iraq's
government as the country struggles to fight the Islamic State group and
respond to an economic crisis sparked in part by a plunge in global oil prices.
A broad-based
protest movement last summer mobilized millions and pressured Iraqi Prime
Minister Haider al-Abadi to submit a proposal to reduce the size of the Cabinet
and replace political appointees with independent technocrats.
But that
proposal has been stalled in the face of Iraq's entrenched political blocs, and
in recent months al-Sadr's movement has come to monopolize the protests.
Earlier on
Saturday, a bombing in a market filled with Shiite civilians in Baghdad killed
at least 21 people and wounded at least 42 others, according to police and
hospital officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not
authorized to brief reporters.
IS claimed the attack, saying it used a
three-ton truck bomb. The extremist group regularly carries out attacks
targeting the security forces and the country's Shiite majority.
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