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freepalestine
27th February 2011, 17:49
Iraq 'Day of Rage' protests followed by detentions, beatings

By Stephanie McCrummen




February 26, 2011

BAGHDAD - Iraqi security forces detained hundreds of people, including prominent journalists, artists and intellectuals, witnesses said Saturday, a day after nationwide demonstrations brought tens of thousands of Iraqis into the streets and ended with soldiers shooting into crowds.

Four journalists who had been released described being rounded up well after they had left a protest at Baghdad's Tahrir Square. They said they were handcuffed, blindfolded, beaten and threatened with execution by soldiers from an army intelligence unit.

"It was like they were dealing with a bunch of al-Qaeda operatives, not a group of journalists," said Hussam al-Ssairi, a journalist and poet, who was among a group and described seeing hundreds of protesters in black hoods at the detention facility. "Yesterday was like a test, like a picture of the new democracy in Iraq."

Protesters mostly stayed home Saturday, following more than a dozen demonstrations across the country Friday that killed at least 29 people, as crowds stormed provincial buildings, forced local officials to resign, freed prisoners and otherwise demanded more from a government they only recently had a chance to elect.


"I have demands!" Salma Mikahil, 48, cried out from Tahrir Square on Friday, as military helicopters and snipers looked down on thousands of people bearing handmade signs and olive branches signifying peace. "I want to see if Maliki can accept that I live on this," Mikahil said, waving a 1,000-dinar note, worth less than a dollar, toward Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's offices. "I want to see if his conscience accepts it."

The protests - billed as Iraq's "Day of Rage" - were intended to call for reform of Maliki's government, not revolution. From the southern city of Basra to northern cities of Kurdistan, protesters demanded the simple dignities of adequate electricity, clean water and a decent job.

As the day wore on, however, the demonstrations grew violent when security forces deployed water cannons and sound bombs to disperse crowds. Iraqi military helicopters swooped toward the demonstrators in Baghdad, and soldiers fired into angry crowds in the protest here and in at least seven others across the country.

And in that way, the day introduced a new sort of conflict to a population that has been targeted by sectarian militias and suicide bombers. Now, many wondered whether they would have to add to the list of enemies their government.

Ssairi and his three colleagues, one of whom had been on the radio speaking in support of protesters, said about a dozen soldiers stormed into a restaurant where they were eating dinner Friday afternoon and began beating them as other diners looked on in silence. They drove them to a side street and beat them again.


Then, blindfolded, they were driven to the former Ministry of Defense building, which houses an intelligence unit of the Iraqi army's 11th Division, they said. Hadi al-Mahdi, a theater director and radio anchor who has been calling for reform, said he was blindfolded and beaten repeatedly with sticks, boots and fists. One soldier put a stick into Hadi's handcuffed hands and threatened to rape him with it, he said.

The soldiers accused him of being a tool of outsiders wishing to topple Maliki's government; they demanded that he confess to being a member of Saddam Hussein's Baath Party. Hadi told them that he blamed Baathists for killing two of his brothers and that until recently he had been a member of Maliki's Dawa Party.

Hadi said he was then taken to a detention cell, his blindfold off, where he said there were at least 300 people with black hoods over their heads, many groaning in bloody shirts. Several told him they had been detained during or after the protests.

Hadi, who comes from a prominent Iraqi family, and his colleagues were released after their friends managed to make some well-placed phone calls.

"This government is sending a message to us, to everybody," he said Saturday, his forehead bruised, his left leg swollen.

Although the protests were primarily aimed at reform, there were mini examples of revolution all day Friday, hyperlocal versions of the recent revolts in Egypt, Tunisia and, in a way, Libya. Crowds forced the resignation of the governor in southern Basra and the entire city council in Fallujah. They also chased away the governor of Mosul, the brother of the speaker of parliament, who was there and fled, too.


The protests began peacefully but grew more aggressive. Angry crowds seized a police station in Kirkuk, set fire to a provincial office in Mosul and rattled fences around the local governate offices in Tikrit, prompting security forces to open fire with live bullets, killing four people. Three people were killed in Kirkuk.

Six people were killed in Fallujah and six others in Mosul, according to reports from officials and witnesses in at least seven protests. On Saturday, officials reported additional deaths: a 60-year old man in Fallujah; two people, including a 13-year old boy, in Qobaisa; and two in Ramadi, all in predominantly Sunni Anbar province.

The reports attributed most casualties to security forces who opened fire.

By sundown in Baghdad on Friday, security forces were spraying water cannons and exploding sound bombs to disperse protesters, chasing several through streets and alleyways and killing at least three, according to a witness.

Two people were also reported killed in Kurdistan, in the north.

The day's events posed a unique challenge for the Obama administration, which has struggled to calibrate its responses to the protests rolling across the Middle East and North Africa but has a particular stake in the stability of the fledgling democracy it helped usher in.

Analysts said Friday's developments were at best awkward for the United States.

"Obama wants to convey that yes, Iraq has a number of problems that need to be addressed, but the country is on the right track," said Joost Hiltermann, deputy director for the International Crisis Group's Middle East program. "You can't possibly say, 'Iraq is in a crisis, and by the way, we're leaving.' "

The United States is set to complete the withdrawal of all its troops from Iraq by the end of the year.

The U.S. Embassy in Baghdad played down Friday's violence, as well as the draconian measures Maliki took to stifle turnout.


Iraq's security forces "generally have not used force against peaceful protesters," said Aaron Snipe, an embassy spokesman. "We support the Iraqi people's right to freely express their political views, to peacefully protest and seek redress form their government. This has been our consistent message in Iraq and throughout the region."

The turnout Friday appeared to surprise many of the demonstrators, coming as it did after a curfew on cars and even bicycles forced people to walk, often miles, to participate. There were also pleas - some described them as threatening - from Maliki and Shiite clerics, including the populist Moqtada al-Sadr, to stay home.

Sadr, whose Mahdi Army is blamed for some of the worst sectarian violence of the war, is now part of Maliki's governing coalition and attempting to position himself as both insider and outsider. Sadr's power lies in his rare ability to call hundreds of thousands into the streets, and analysts said he is perhaps concerned about losing his impoverished urban followers to the new and still only vaguely unified protest movement .

By mid-morning in Baghdad, people were walking toward Tahrir Square along empty streets fortified with soldiers in Humvees, snipers on rooftops and mosque domes and checkpoints with X-ray equipment that might reveal a suicide vest.

Young and old, some missing legs and arms, some chanting old slogans of the Mahdi Army, the protesters passed crumbling high-rise apartment buildings webbed with electrical wires hooked to generators. At times, the air smelled like sewage.

"Bring electricity!" they shouted. "No to corruption!"


By afternoon, several thousand people were milling around the square, which is next to a bridge leading to the heavily guarded international zone housing the government's offices. Overnight, security forces had hauled in huge blast walls to block the bridge from protesters, who nonetheless managed to hoist a rope around one of them and pull it down.

"As you can see, they are hiding behind this wall!" shouted Sbeeh Noman, a white-haired engineer who said he walked 12 miles to reach the square and was now heading for the bridge. "The government is afraid of the nation. They have found out that the people have the real power."

- [email protected] ([email protected])Special correspondents Ali Qeis and Aziz Alwan contributed to this report.



:: Article nr. 75372 sent on 27-feb-2011 00:41 ECT


www.uruknet.info?p=75372 (http://www.uruknet.info?p=75372)

Link: www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/02/26/AR2011022601854_pf.html (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/02/26/AR2011022601854_pf.html)

freepalestine
27th February 2011, 17:58
Iraqi Rage Protests 2011-25-2: Shooting protesters with Heavy fire in Alhawijah in Iraq
IraqiRevolutions


CqGzZUmemeM

Video: Iraqi riot police open fire toward the protesters and kill 2 and injures many in Mosul 2011-2-25
IraqiRevolutions

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--------------------------------------------------


At least 29 dead in Iraq protests

UPI




February 27, 2011


BAGHDAD, Feb. 27 (UPI) -- At least 29 people died in demonstrations across Iraq, where security forces detained about 300 people, including journalists, witnesses said.

Deaths -- including that of a 14-year-old boy -- were reported in at least eight cities, including Fallujah, Mosul and Tikrit, The Washington Post reported Sunday.

Witnesses said security forces fired live bullets and water cannons at demonstrators Friday and described the detentions as an operation to frighten intellectuals who could influence public opinion.

Four journalists detained in Baghdad said they were blindfolded, handcuffed, beaten and threatened with execution before being released Saturday.

"It was like they were dealing with a bunch of al-Qaida operatives, not a group of journalists," said Hussan al-Ssairi, one of the journalists detained. "Yesterday was like a test, like a picture of the new democracy in Iraq."

Ssairi said he and his colleagues were sitting at an outdoor restaurant about 2 miles from Baghdad's Tahrir Square, where the demonstrations were focused. He said security forces arrived in two Humvees and started beating a group of people, including a journalist.

"We said, 'What are you doing -- we're journalists!'" said journalist Hadi al-Mahdi. "And they said '(expletive) journalism.'"

Unlike the anti-government protests in the Middle East and North Africa, demonstrators in Iraq were calling for reform and an end to corruption, rather than the overthrow of the government.







:: Article nr. 75392 sent on 27-feb-2011 18:35 ECT


www.uruknet.info?p=75392 (http://www.uruknet.info?p=75392)

Link: www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2011/02/27/At-least-29-dead-in-Iraq-protests/UPI (http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2011/02/27/At-least-29-dead-in-Iraq-protests/UPI-56511298812676/#ixzz1FBKXFaZi)
-56511298812676/#ixzz1FBKXFaZi

Rakhmetov
27th February 2011, 18:13
These Arabs make us Americans look like fops.

erupt
28th February 2011, 20:10
Fucking digusting. Funny Western media mentions protests in Egypt, Libya, Bahrain, Yemen, Oman, Iran a bit, and even Saudia Arabia. I did not hear once, on Western media, about Iraqi protests, or uprisings.

Just goes to show, when riot-police and military have less cameras around to document what happened, they have more ability to commit atrocities.

Os Cangaceiros
28th February 2011, 20:21
Damn, respect. It takes some serious guts to go out into the streets and face down state-sponsored terrorism like these protestors are doing.

Red_Struggle
28th February 2011, 20:35
You would think these riot police would have at least a spec of decency before firing upon their own people...

but I guess that's why they're riot police.

ckaihatsu
23rd April 2011, 01:57
Update: Iraqi Sit-in Movement Continues


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Dear Chris,
Iraqis continue protests against the US Occupation and Maliki’s government in Mosul

Two weeks ago, we reported that a national sit-in movement launched across Iraq. The city of Mosul in northern Iraq seems to have become the epicenter of the continuing protests this week.



An estimated three hundred Iraqis initially set up tents in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul to demand an end to the U.S. occupation, the release of political prisoners, rewriting of the constitution, and the departure of what they call the ‘Green Zone’ government, headed by Nouri al-Maliki.




Protesters stand outside of tents for Mosul sit-ins.



Among the dozens of grassroots organizations calling for sit-ins in front of U.S. military bases, two of the most prominent taking part in Mosul are the Popular Movement to Save Iraq and The Free Iraqis of Mosul. Contingents of Iraqis from as far south as Nasiriyah and al-Basra are at the Mosul sit-in being held in what has become known as ‘Prisoner’s Square.’ The calls for nation-wide demonstrations in Iraq comes in the wake of high-ranking U.S. politicians including Senator Kerry, Vice President Biden, and most recently Secretary Gates all implying that U.S. forces may stay past the December 2011 deadline.



Last week, Iraqi Facebook pages administered directly by protest organizers reported that government security forces encircled their camp, surveiled and taunted them, and called on them to end their sit-in. Protesters also reported that a low-flying American military helicopter swept towards the demonstrators, in what was interpreted as an attempt to intimidate them. Their response, captured in the video below, was to throw dozens of shoes towards the helicopter, and has prompted them to ask for an investigation into why this military vehicle was sent towards them.



Iraqi protesters throw shoes at low-flying US helicopters.







Demonstrations have been joined by dozens of women, who are calling for the end of the U.S. occupation and the release of their sons and brothers who are held in both Iraqi and US prisons throughout Iraq. This week tribal chieftains from nearby Anbar province joined the Mosul protests as well.

As of today, reports now estimate the growing crowds in Mosul to number in the thousands, comprised of many young people who were last seen marching toward the 4th bridge, where they were stopped by government troops preventing them from going to the square to join with other protesters.

Demonstrators are insistent on continuing their sit-in until all their demands are met, foremost of which are:

- Complete departure of the U.S. occupying forces.

- No extension of the security agreement between the Maliki government and the U.S.

- The release of innocent prisoners.


We will keep you informed of new developments in this growing Iraqi protest movement.

Thanks again to Ali Issa at War Resister's League for helping to compile this report.


In Solidarity,

Iraq Veterans Against the War


Iraq Veterans Against the War is a 501(c)(3) charity,
and welcomes your tax deductible contributions



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ckaihatsu
11th May 2011, 00:14
http://www.labourstart.org/cgi-bin/solidarityforever/show_campaign.cgi?c=917



اﻻتحاد العام لنقابات العمال فى العراق
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الاتحاد العام لنقابات العمال في العراق يشارك في اجتماعات اللجان الاستشارية لاتحاد العمال العرب
About the GFIW


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The Government of Iraq Takes Arbitrary Measures Against the GFIW
27/04/2011 by admin

Statement issued by the

General Federation of Iraqi Workers (GFIW)

The Arbitrary Measures against the Trade Union



To our great Iraqi people and the masses of the Iraqi working class

The Higher Ministerial Committee, overseeing the implementation of the Decree of the Governing Council No. 3 of 2004, on 17.04.2011, committed illegal, illegitimate and arbitrary measures against the rights of our General Federation of Iraqi Workers (GFIW), by issuing circular numbers 95 and 96. They were the following, firstly, the dismissal of the Executive Bureau of the GFIW, secondly, the authorisation of the Ministerial Preparatory Committee (MPC) for the Elections, to renew and issue memberships to trade unionists. Both measures are in clear violation of the law and pave the way for rigging elections for narrow partisan political objectives.

The enlarged meeting of the trade union cadres from the whole of Iraq on Sunday 04.17.2011 concluded that there are irregularities and non-democratic measures and procedures in violation of the Act of the organisation of trade unions number 52 for the year 1987, and the process of conducting an election. These violations are:

First: The MPC for the elections informed the trade union federations and trade unions in the provinces that the GFIW’s Executive Bureau does not represent the trade union movement. Instead, it decided that the MPC is responsible for administering the GFIW. This is clearly contrary to the Act of the organisation of trade unions, where there is not a clause detailing this.

Second: The MPC for the elections informed the trade unions in the provinces that the unions have the power to form union committees outside the current existing trade union framework, which will create an imbalance in the structure of the trade union movement.

Third: The MPC for the elections informed the trade unions in the provinces that those who wish to provide the issuing of memberships, without referring to the union concerned and the sub-committees at work sites. This action will provide an environment for the breaking up of the unity of workers.

Fourth: The MPC for the elections sought the Executive bureau members and the leaderships in the provinces to stand in the election of the trade union sub-committees, and this contrary to the prevailing custom union and the election process.

The GFIW deplores and condemns these illegal measures, which violate and breach the national legislation in force, namely Article 22 of the Iraqi Constitution and the Act of the organisation of trade unions number 52 for the year 1987 and the rules of common procedure of the regulations of the trade union in Iraq, as well as the criteria of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) and the Arab Labour Organisation (ALO) and international conventions ratified by the successive Iraqi governments.

To our militant workers

The GFIW strives that the trade union elections will be conducted in a free, impartial, independent and democratic manner. And there shall be no interference in the internal affairs by any body. We believe that the strength and experience of trade-unionists all over Iraq are capable of selecting the right people to lead the, from the sub-committees, up to the Executive Bureau, through periodic conferences organized by the labour legislations. Moreover, we stress that the formation of the preparatory committees for the elections is of the competence of the Executive Bureau of the GFIW, of the trade union federations in the provinces and the general trade unions in Baghdad in accordance with Article 44 of the Act of the organisation of trade unions 52 for the year 1987.

Hence, the MPC for the elections, formed by The Higher Ministerial Committee, overseeing the implementation of the Decree of the Governing Council No. 3 of 2004,is illegal and illegitimate, and it is not possible to deal with it in organising the elections within unions democratically and transparently. This is because it broke all the pledges and guarantees it presented for the application of international labour standards recognized by the international community. Therefore, we call upon the brave sons of our working class to boycott the Committee for being illegitimate and violating your rights.

To sons of the striving working class

The GWIF strives to conduct free and fair elections in accordance with Iraqi laws and international labour standards and to ensure a real representation of the working class in Iraqi society and play its role in international organizations through the defence of the interests of the working class in international forums. Thus, we call upon the valiant working class to participate broadly and consciously in the elections, which will be conducted by the preparatory committee formed by the GFIW in accordance to national and international, laws and legitimacies. In a free and democratic spirit, away from the interventions, by any body, in order to establish the true values ​​of democracy, and to be a model for a new democratic Iraq.

We also call upon the national forces, unions and professional syndicates, namely: Iraqi civil society organizations, the International Federation of Arab Trade Unions, the International Confederation of Trade Unions, the ILO and the ALO, to show solidarity and support, and to intervene to prevent the MPC implementing its directives and to impose its views and its interference in the electoral process of the Trade Unions.


Long live the Iraqi working class and its trade movements

Glory and eternity for the martyrs of the working class

ExecutiveCommittee

General Federation of Iraqi Workers

20 April 2011



The Government of Iraq Takes Arbitrary Measures Against the GFIW
27/04/2011 by admin

Statement issued by the

General Federation of Iraqi Workers (GFIW)

The Arbitrary Measures against the Trade Union



To our great Iraqi people and the masses of the Iraqi working class

The Higher Ministerial Committee, overseeing the implementation of the Decree of the Governing Council No. 3 of 2004, on 17.04.2011, committed illegal, illegitimate and arbitrary measures against the rights of our General Federation of Iraqi Workers (GFIW), by issuing circular numbers 95 and 96. They were the following, firstly, the dismissal of the Executive Bureau of the GFIW, secondly, the authorisation of the Ministerial Preparatory Committee (MPC) for the Elections, to renew and issue memberships to trade unionists. Both measures are in clear violation of the law and pave the way for rigging elections for narrow partisan political objectives.

The enlarged meeting of the trade union cadres from the whole of Iraq on Sunday 04.17.2011 concluded that there are irregularities and non-democratic measures and procedures in violation of the Act of the organisation of trade unions number 52 for the year 1987, and the process of conducting an election. These violations are:

First: The MPC for the elections informed the trade union federations and trade unions in the provinces that the GFIW’s Executive Bureau does not represent the trade union movement. Instead, it decided that the MPC is responsible for administering the GFIW. This is clearly contrary to the Act of the organisation of trade unions, where there is not a clause detailing this.

Second: The MPC for the elections informed the trade unions in the provinces that the unions have the power to form union committees outside the current existing trade union framework, which will create an imbalance in the structure of the trade union movement.

Third: The MPC for the elections informed the trade unions in the provinces that those who wish to provide the issuing of memberships, without referring to the union concerned and the sub-committees at work sites. This action will provide an environment for the breaking up of the unity of workers.

Fourth: The MPC for the elections sought the Executive bureau members and the leaderships in the provinces to stand in the election of the trade union sub-committees, and this contrary to the prevailing custom union and the election process.

The GFIW deplores and condemns these illegal measures, which violate and breach the national legislation in force, namely Article 22 of the Iraqi Constitution and the Act of the organisation of trade unions number 52 for the year 1987 and the rules of common procedure of the regulations of the trade union in Iraq, as well as the criteria of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) and the Arab Labour Organisation (ALO) and international conventions ratified by the successive Iraqi governments.

To our militant workers

The GFIW strives that the trade union elections will be conducted in a free, impartial, independent and democratic manner. And there shall be no interference in the internal affairs by any body. We believe that the strength and experience of trade-unionists all over Iraq are capable of selecting the right people to lead the, from the sub-committees, up to the Executive Bureau, through periodic conferences organized by the labour legislations. Moreover, we stress that the formation of the preparatory committees for the elections is of the competence of the Executive Bureau of the GFIW, of the trade union federations in the provinces and the general trade unions in Baghdad in accordance with Article 44 of the Act of the organisation of trade unions 52 for the year 1987.

Hence, the MPC for the elections, formed by The Higher Ministerial Committee, overseeing the implementation of the Decree of the Governing Council No. 3 of 2004,is illegal and illegitimate, and it is not possible to deal with it in organising the elections within unions democratically and transparently. This is because it broke all the pledges and guarantees it presented for the application of international labour standards recognized by the international community. Therefore, we call upon the brave sons of our working class to boycott the Committee for being illegitimate and violating your rights.

To sons of the striving working class

The GWIF strives to conduct free and fair elections in accordance with Iraqi laws and international labour standards and to ensure a real representation of the working class in Iraqi society and play its role in international organizations through the defence of the interests of the working class in international forums. Thus, we call upon the valiant working class to participate broadly and consciously in the elections, which will be conducted by the preparatory committee formed by the GFIW in accordance to national and international, laws and legitimacies. In a free and democratic spirit, away from the interventions, by any body, in order to establish the true values ​​of democracy, and to be a model for a new democratic Iraq.

We also call upon the national forces, unions and professional syndicates, namely: Iraqi civil society organizations, the International Federation of Arab Trade Unions, the International Confederation of Trade Unions, the ILO and the ALO, to show solidarity and support, and to intervene to prevent the MPC implementing its directives and to impose its views and its interference in the electoral process of the Trade Unions.

Long live the Iraqi working class and its trade movements

Glory and eternity for the martyrs of the working class

ExecutiveCommittee

General Federation of Iraqi Workers

20 April 2011


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