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Iraq protests continue as sit-ins spread, key port closed

An independent human rights group calls on security forces not to use live rounds, while it sees rubber bullets as mostly responsible for 250 deaths
Parts of Iraq were again brought to a standstill on the first day of the working week (AFP)
Par MEE staff

Weeks-long protests continued in Iraq's capital on Sunday, shutting down streets and government offices as demonstrators demanded change to the political system.

Students took part in sit-ins at their schools and parked cars along main thoroughfares to block traffic in Baghdad on the first day of the work week, in what protesters said was non-violent resistance.

The national teachers union extended a strike begun last week, as unions representing engineers, doctors and lawyers continued to back demonstrations.

"We decided to cut the roads as a message to the government that we will keep protesting until the corrupt people and thieves are kicked out and the regime falls," Tahseen Nasser, a 25-year-old protester told AFP in the eastern city of Kut.

"We're not allowing government workers to reach their offices, just those in humanitarian fields" such as hospital staff, he said. 

Outrage against rampant corruption and unemployment broke out into street protests on 1 October, bringing parts of the country to a standstill and eliciting a violent government response, killing dozens.

More than 250 people have died so far in the crackdown on the unrest.

Some 120 people were injured on Saturday night alone after security forces used live rounds and tear gas against protesters blocking the road leading to Iraq's main Gulf port, Umm Qasr, according to the Independent High Commission for Human Rights in Iraq.

The highway leading to the port remained closed on Sunday, with a source telling AFP news agency that around a dozen ships had left to take their goods elsewhere after being unable to dock.

Spread of sit-ins

The government has proposed a range of measures, including social welfare reforms and early elections.

This has failed to satisfy protesters, who are increasingly demanding wholesale changes to the political establishment.

"We decided on this campaign of civil disobedience because we have had it up to here with the government's lies and promises of so-called reform," said Mohammad al-Assadi, a government employee on strike in the southern city of Nasiriyah.

In Basra, the oil-rich port city, public schools were shut for the first time since the protests began. Demonstrators have organised sit-ins in Nasiriyah, occupying the main streets and squares and blocking four bridges crossing  the Euphrates leading out of the city.

Schools and government offices were closed in the southeastern city and across a half-dozen other cities in the south.

The spreading sit-ins are a sign of a new phase in the protests, the largest grassroots movement the country has seen in decades.

In a statement, the Independent High Commission for Human Rights in Iraq on Sunday called on Iraqi authorities to cease using live rounds and "seek other means that save the lives of the demonstrators".

The commission claimed that most deaths were due to the use of rubber bullets "which is contrary to the principles of human rights".

"The Commission expresses its support for the right to peaceful demonstration and the legitimate demands of the protestors," the statement added.

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