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2019–2021 Iraqi protests

The 2019–2021 Iraqi protests were a series of demonstrations, marches, sit-ins and civil disobedience in Iraq. It started on 1 October 2019, a date which was set by civil activists on social media, spreading mainly over the central and southern provinces of Iraq, to protest corruption, unemployment, political sectarianism, inefficient public services and interventionism. The protest then escalated into calls to overthrow the Iraqi government. The government, with the help of Iranian-backed militias used live bullets, marksmen, hot water, hot pepper gas and tear gas against protesters, leading to many deaths and injuries.[10][11][12][13]

2019–2021 Iraqi protests
Part of the 2018–2022 Arab protests, 2019–2021 Persian Gulf crisis
Protest in Baghdad in November 2019
Date1 October 2019 (2019-10-01) – 24 July 2021 (Occasional protests until 5 November 2021)
Location
Caused by
Goals
  • Secularism[5][6]
  • End of foreign intervention in Iraqi affairs[7]
  • Improved government services
  • Improved standard of living
Methods
Resulted in
Parties to the civil conflict
Lead figures
Casualties
Death(s)600 - 1,100
Injuries25,000 - 30,000
Arrested4,600
Casualties data: 13 January 2020, per Iraqi Warcrimes Documentation Center[9]

The protesters called for the end of the sectarian political system which was created by the United States and allies after the US-led invasion in 2003, and has been marked by sectarian divides mainly between Shias and Sunnis as well as other sects by religious figures and politicians.[14][15][16] The protests, which were the largest of their kind in Iraq since the 2003 invasion, gave rise to the October Protest Movement.[17]

Background

In 2011, protests broke out in various provinces within Iraq demanding the end of corruption, nepotism, and unemployment, while also calling for increased wages and improved public services such as electricity, transportation, health care, education and municipal services.[18][19][20] Protestors faced government suppression, police brutality and arrests.[21] These reform demands in the six Sunni-dominant provinces escalated during the 2012–2013 Iraqi protests after Nouri Al-Maliki's acts of persecution against Sunni political figures.[22][23] This, in turn, led to protests calling for the overthrow of the sectarian government and redrafting the constitution, as well as a march into Baghdad to occupy the Green Zone.[23] These protests were faced with even more government suppression, leading to clashes between security forces and local tribesmen who had alleged support from Ba'ath Party loyalists.[24][25] After reports of the Sunni factions, which were part of the Iraqi insurgency against the American occupation, unifying their powers and taking control over Al Anbar Governorate, the government launched the 2013 Anbar campaign.[26] By July 2014, these factions which merged with ISIL had occupied most of Al-Anbar, Ninawa, Salah ad-Din, Kirkuk and Diyala which ignited the War in Iraq (2013–2017). The U.S. Secretary of State pledged "intense" support to the Iraqi government while imploring the Government to rise above "sectarian motivations" but according to senior officials in the Department of Defense the U.S. was refraining from giving weapons to the Iraqi military "because of lack of confidence in Iraqi troops", while veteran U.S. journalists familiar with the situation claimed that Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki "is not the answer and should step down".[27][28]

Fueled by the lack of progress of Haider al-Abadi's government and state corruption, the leader of the Sadrist Movement, Muqtada al-Sadr, called for a sit-in within the Green Zone in Baghdad to force the government to find serious solutions for corruption.[29] On 30 April 2016, thousands of Al-Sadr's followers breached the barricades of the Green Zone and stormed into governmental buildings, including the Iraqi parliament,[30] chasing representatives out of the Green Zone before retreating the day after by the call of Al-Sadr.[31] Another demonstration broke out in Basra and nearby cities in July 2018 due to deteriorating public utilities, water contamination and lack of electricity and continued for a few months.[32][33] Protestors burned down a number of government buildings and parties' headquarters, blocked numerous main streets, tore and burned pictures of Khomeini and Khamenei and even occupied the Al-Najaf and Basra International Airports.[34][35] They were faced with live bullets from security forces causing the death of at least 16 protestors.[36][37][35]

Remembering the rise of ISIS during the protests in 2012,[38] these ones avoided sectarian rhetoric.[39] Initially Americans had not seemed to be the focus of the anger although a 2019 poll found that only 22% of Iraqis had a favorable opinion of the United States, while 16% had a favorable opinion of Iran.[38]

Prelude

On 20 June in Basra demonstrators gathered outside the city's new administrative headquarters to vent their anger about poor basic services and unemployment. The old headquarters were burnt down during 2018's months-long protest. Basra and the surrounding region produce about 90 percent of the country's oil wealth but most of its residents have not benefited from it. Protesters blamed Basra's authorities for the city's problems, from a lack of job opportunities to unreliable and poor public utilities. Riot police were deployed at the scene but the protest remained peaceful.[40]

Holders of higher degrees demonstrations

On 25 September 2019, a group of holders of higher degrees organized a protest in front of the Prime Minister's office in Baghdad, demanding their employment.[41] The protest was faced with major suppression from security forces as armoured vehicles separated the demonstrators using hot water and police forces conducted random arrests among them which led to cases of fainting and injuries among the demonstrators.[42] This incident was faced with country-wide anger because of the forceful methods that were used by the government towards intellectual demonstrators, along with the violence that was used against female protestors.[42][43] Reactions included the Ministry of Interior forming a committee to investigate the incident and demonstrators organizing solidarity protests in many provinces to condemn these methods.[42][44] The holders of higher degrees resumed their protests for three days after the incident, spreading over many southern provinces.[45][46]

Dismissal of Abdel-Wahab Al-Saedi

On 27 September 2019, Iraqi Prime Minister Adil Abdul-Mahdi issued a decision to transfer the commander of the Iraqi Counter-Terrorism Force, Lieutenant General Abdel-Wahab Al-Saedi, from the ICTF to the Ministry of Defence. Al-Saedi said the decision was an insult to his military rank and that he would rather go to jail than execute this decision.[47] This decision caused political figures, including former prime minister Haider Al-Abadi and many representatives, to criticize Abdul-Mahdi and call for him to back down from his decisions.[48][49] According to VOA News, Al Saedi's transfer was influenced individually by pro-Iran factions within the Al-Shaabi paramilitary force, said a government official in Iraq who asked to be kept unknown.[50] After the decision was made, social media was flooded with Al-Saedi's photos and achievements, calling for Abdul-Mahdi to back down from this injustice and accusing Iran of ordering the Iraqi government to replace every "national hero" in the army with Iranian loyalists.[51][52] In response to this backlash, Abdul-Mahdi said he stands by his decision and that it is a normal routine decision with no political motivations.[53] Furthermore, after calls for the unveiling of a statue of Al-Saedi in Mosul that was made to immortalize the commander's efforts in the city's liberation, security forces surrounded the statue, prohibiting its unveiling, before it was finally removed by them.[54][55] On 30 September 2019, Al-Saedi announced that he executed Abdul-Mahdi's orders and joined the ministry of defence as "a loyal soldier to serve my country and my beloved people."[56]

Causes, goals and methods

Starting on 25 October 2019, mass protests took place in many cities in Iraq, against corruption and a national government that protestors saw as unaccountable for its actions. After the U.S. occupation (2003–11), oligarchs and warlords were perceived to have taken control over Iraq. While the country produces more oil than the United Arab Emirates, the oil revenues were seen by protestors as failing to be spent on maintenance of hospitals and roads. A widely used slogan in this phase of the protests was: "We want a homeland"—reflecting a longing both for a sense of unity and for a self-determined life in dignity.[57]

While at daytime protesters from all strata of Iraqi society peacefully took to the streets and squares of cities like Kerbala, later at night, youths from the suburbs sought violent confrontations, using molotov cocktails and burning car-tires, which was answered by the state security forces with tear gas, rubber bullets, deadly snipers and even patrol vehicles lethally ramming into crowds.[57]

Assassination and intimidation campaign

Hassan Wahab of the Amal Association human rights group said, "Those [protestors] detained and released are only released on bail. Charges are not dropped so they face re-arrest and trial."[58]

As of 23 December 2019, there were 29 assassinated activists related to the protests, most of them were in Baghdad.[59] On 10 January 2020, an Iraqi journalist, Ahmad Abdelsamad, of Dijlah TV and his cameraman, Safaa Ghali, were shot in their car by unidentified gunmen.[60][61][62]

On 21 January, the police stated that Janat Madhi, a 49-year old activist was gunned down by unknown gunmen as she came back home from protests in the southern city of Basra, according to the Urdu Point.[63]

On 14 August, an activist, Tahseen Osama Al-Shahmani, was shot 20 times at his internet service company in Basra.[64] On 19 August, a female activist, Reham Yacoub, was killed and three others were wounded in the city of Basra, when unidentified gunmen opened fire on their car.[65][66][67]

Attack on the US Embassy in Baghdad

The US Embassy in Baghdad was attacked on the last day of 2019. The attack was organized and directed by Iran's proxy leaders Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, Qais al-Khazali, Hadi al-Amari, and Falih al-Fayyadh. They are seen in the pictures taken on the scene.[68]

Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, one of the leaders of the attack on the US Embassy in Baghdad, was condemned and spent years in jail in Kuwait for directing the December 1983 attacks on the US and French embassies there.[69][70]

For a long time, Iraqi anti-government protestors tried to enter Green Zone and were brutally suppressed and held back. On 31 December, groups of Popular Mobilization Forces (al-Hashd al-Sha'abi) entered the Green Zone and went directly toward the American Embassy without being blocked by security forces.[71]

US president Donald Trump accused Iran of "orchestrating" the attack on the embassy and added that they would be held "fully responsible".[72] In the aftermath, the commander of Iran's Quds Force, Major General Qasem Soleimani, and Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis were assassinated in a U.S. drone strike while traveling in a convoy near Baghdad International Airport.[73] On 5 January in reaction to these airstrikes the Iraqi parliament called for the expulsion of US troops from the country.[74]

Timeline 2019

 
The image shows crowds of people in Tahrir Square from the top of the building where the restaurant is located on November 1, 2019.

October

 
Protesters in Baghdad on 1 October

1 October: Protests erupted in Baghdad in Liberation Square over high unemployment, poor basic services, and state corruption. These protests spread to the southern provinces. The authorities imposed an internet blackout and shut down 75% of the country's internet access.[75] Protesters demanded the resignation of Adil Abdul-Mahdi and prepare for early elections.[76] The protesters also began demonstrating against Iranian influence, and against the leader of Quds Force, Qasem Soleimani.[77] At the beginning of the protests, the demonstrators were mostly young male, holding the government responsible for its many failures, according to vox.[78] The Iraqi prime minister declared a curfew until further notice.[79]

3 October: According to Amnesty International, 18 civilians and one police officer were killed and hundreds were injured after three days of protesting.[80]

4 October: In Nasiriyah, many headquarters of political parties were burned down.[81]

5 October: Unknown forces raided many TV channels such as Al Arabiya, Dijlah TV, NRT and Al Rasheed TV for airing the protests. The forces destroyed these channels' properties.[82]

7 October: Dozens of protesters were killed and hundreds were injured in Sadr City.[83]

8 October: Protests largely ceased due to Arba'een,[84] a Shia religious holiday which occurred on 19 October. According to Arab News, regardless of warnings from the Iranian authorities for the pilgrims to procrastinate going on the pilgrimage to Iraq, 3.5 million Shiites, mainly Iranians entered Iraq through land borders on Friday.[85]

24 October: Thousands of protesters began to congregate at Liberation Square in Baghdad, protesting against the government and against the Iranian influence. Nearly 50 protesters were killed and injured after attempting to enter the Green Zone.[86]

25 October: Protesting in Maysan Governorate began to turn into riots between Peace Companies led by Muqtada al-Sadr on one side and Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq and Badr Organization on another.[87] Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq member Wisam Alyawi and his brother, both PMU commanders for the Maysan Governorate, were lynched by angry protesters who dragged them out of an ambulance and beat them to death. Qais Khazali, chief of all Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq, announced that nine PMU members had been killed in the recent protests, blamed Israel for their deaths, and stated he would take revenge "four times over."[88] Protesters burned down and destroyed many offices of political parties in the city of Samawah.[89] Protesters in Karbala chanted against Iran, tearing up Ali Khamenei's pictures. They also attacked the Governorate Council building.[90] They also burnt the Iranian consulate.[91] In Al-Qādisiyyah Governorate, protesters burned down the Governorate Council building. Administrative authorities declared a curfew in the province.[92] In the city of Al Kūt, protesters attacked many of the political parties' offices and also attacked the house of former Minister of Interior, Qasim al-Araji.[93]

26 October: 7 protesters were killed and 28 wounded after conflicts between Badr Organization and protesters in city of Hillah in Babil Governorate.[94] The seven protesters died when members of the Badr organization opened fire at protesters assembled in front of their office, according to The Guardian.[95]

28 October: A top security authority for Baghdad declared an open-ended curfew on the capital, four days after the renewed protests against government killed more than 70 protesters.[96] In Karbala, 14–30 people were killed in protests. Government officials denied any deaths occurred.[91]

30 October: Iranian military officer Qasem Soleimani met with Hadi al-Amiri, one of Abdul-Mahdi's political opponents, and asked him to support Abdul-Mahdi.[97]

31 October: President Barham Salih said in a televised address that the Prime Minister had agreed to resign, "on the condition that a successor is agreed to replace him."[98]

November

2 November: Protesters blocked Iraq's main port Umm Qasr. Oil exports from offshore platforms were not affected, but imports of staple food were. Iraq is heavily dependent on food import.[99]

3 November: Protestors stormed the Iranian consulate in Karbala, where they set fires around the building and replaced the Iranian flag with an Iraqi one.[100] According to Reuters, 3 protesters were killed when Iraqi security forces fired live ammunition at protesters gathered outside the Iranian consulate.[101] However, the BBC was led to believe that the source of the gunfire was anonymous and it was aimed at both the security forces and protesters.[102]

4 November: An internet blockage observatory, NetBlocks highlighted that the internet access in Baghdad and five other regions in Iraq were cut off on 4 November, in wake of the continued rage in the country.[103] Netblocks added that the new internet shut down is currently perceived to be the most extreme shut down experienced in Iraq.[104] Iraqi authorities had taken a similar move in October, where social media and messaging remained highly restricted in several parts of the country.[105]

8 November: Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Iraq's most influential Shia cleric, called on the government to meet the demands of the protesters, and urged the security forces to avoid the use of violence.[106]

10 November: The Iraqi Parliamentary Human Rights Committee reported that at least 319 people had been killed during the protests. According to the Independent High Commission for Human Rights of Iraq, an additional 15,000 were injured.[107]

13 November: The Iraqi Parliament held a special session to discuss the crisis. Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert of the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq addressed the session to present her plan to resolve the crisis, which involves election reform and anti-corruption measures.[108]

14 November: Four people were killed and 62 injured in Baghdad in clashes between security forces and protesters.[109]

16 November: At least four protesters were killed and nearly 20 were injured as a car bomb attack took place at the Tahrir Square in Baghdad. No group claimed responsibility of the first explosion in the ongoing anti-government protests.[110]

17 November: Documents leaked by The Intercept[111] revealed details of Iranian influence inside Iraq.[112] The Intercept was said to have received the documents from an unknown source and has since been unable to identify, according to the guardian.[113]

19 November: Protesters blocked the entrance to the country's second largest commercial port, Khor al-Zubair port, halting the trade activity for oil and other tankers. Prior to that, the access to Umm Qasr Port was also cut off.[114]

21 November: Al-Jazeera reported that at least seven protesters were killed and 78 wounded by security forces in Baghdad.[115]

24 November: At least two protesters were shot dead in the southern city of Nasiriyah, as they shut down schools and blocked the Zaitoun and the Nasr bridges into the city center. Nearly 47 people were also wounded during the clashes with security forces.[116]

27 November: Protestors attacked the Iranian consulate in Najaf for the second time, this time burning it down.[117] Security forces fired tear gas into the crowd and injured some of them but had to escape when hundreds of protesters poured into the consulate and set it on fire.[118]

29 November: 44 protestors were killed in southern Iraq.[119] The prime minister announced his pending resignation on the same day.[120]

December

 
Protesters occupy the unfinished Turkish restaurant building in Baghdad

1 December: Despite the resignation of Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi, demonstrators in the Shi'ite populated city of Najaf set fire to the Iranian consulate, for the second time in a week.[121] According to the BBC, reports showed that staff at the Iranian consulate were able to escape immediately before the demonstrators stormed the consulate.[122] A police official said that when the police fired shots with live ammunition in order to stop the protesters from breaking into the consulate, one protester was killed and a minimum of 35 people were injured, according to Al Jazeera.[123]

6 December: Unidentified gunmen in vehicles opened fire on protesters in Baghdad's Khilani Square, killing 25 (including three police officers) and injuring around 130 others.[124] The attacks were said to have followed a day after a string of suspicious stabbings in Baghdad's Tahrir Square, leaving at least 15 wounded, according to the guardian.[125][126] According to Aljazeera, some protesters blamed the Iraqi government of conspiring with the gunmen, indicating to a power outage that coincided with the time of the attacks.[127]

8 December: An Iraqi civil activist, Fahim al-Ta'i was assassinated by unknown gunmen on motorcycle outside al-Ansar Hotel in the Baroudi area of Karbala.[128]

12 December: A 16-year-old boy - falsely accused of shooting protestors - was dragged along the ground and lynched by protestors after security forces withdrew. The boy's deceased body was de-clothed apart from his underpants and was later hung from a traffic light. It was later removed by his family and taken to a forensic morgue.[129]

Muqtada al-Sadr's group stated that it would withdraw its "blue helmets" support for the protests unless the "terrorists responsible" for the lynching were identified.[129] A protestor's group described the lynching as "a Machiavellian plan aimed at tarnishing the reputation of the peaceful protesters" and that the protestors "had nothing to do with" the lynching event.[129]

24 December: The Council of Representatives passed a series of electoral laws to placate protestors. The laws transitioned elections to a single non-transferable vote system, which allowed voters to select individuals rather than use party lists, while the candidates would represent electoral districts rather than provinces.[130] The new electoral law is expected to have representatives represent more local voices, as opposed to the entire governorate they were previously elected from, as well as stop infighting amongst list members and a myriad of small lists from siphoning off votes and failing to meet the electoral threshold. It would also prevent parties from running on unified lists, which had previously led some to easily sweep all the seats in a particular governorate. However, minority groups might end up being less represented, as they now have to obtain a plurality in the district they are running in, and the number of seats might not accurately reflect overall popular support. The Washington Institute for Near East Policy had previously endorsed this approach,[131] although the Al-Bayan Center for Planning and Studies, an independent non-profit think tank in Baghdad, had proposed instead retaining the proportional system, but creating more districts so that each elected between three and eight seats each, which would retain the proportional aspect of seat allocation while binding representatives to more local areas.[132] Most Kurdish legislators boycotted the meeting of the council, in opposition to changing the law.[133] After its passage, legal experts, intellectuals, and some protestors suggested that the law as written might not work as intended, as there has not been a census to count population for the purpose of drawing districts in over two decades, and the parties might end up running candidates individually but then re-form parliamentary groups once the Council sits, effectively returning to the status quo.[134] The new law apportions for the legislature to be shrunk to 251 seats (down from 329), says that the districts that are to be created must consist of over 100,000 people, and reduced the age of eligibility for candidacy to 25 from 30. One-quarter of seats would be reserved for women, and 9 would be reserved for national religious minorities. The law also established the Independent High Electoral Commission, which is to be composed of nine members, seven of whom would be judges from regular courts. In addition, there are two other judges from the State Council (administrative court).

26 December: President Barham Salih submits a letter of resignation after refusing to appoint Asaad Al Eidani as Prime Minister following the resignation of Adil Abdul-Mahdi. Salih stated that Al Eridani would not be approved by the demonstrators.[135][136] President Salih added that since the constitution voids him of the right to refuse a nomination, he prefers to step down instead of accepting the nomination of a new prime minister that the protesters would reject.[137]

29 December: The US bombarded Kata'ib Hezbollah positions in Iraq, killing 25 members of those Kataib forces and injuring 51 others.[138]

31 December: Hundreds of anti-American protesters surrounded the US embassy in Baghdad in the Green Zone of the city where embassies and government buildings are concentrated, in protest over the US airstrikes in Iraq, two days earlier. Protesters elsewhere in Baghdad's Tahrir Square stated: "demonstrations at the US embassy are a natural response to the US strikes over Hashd positions in Iraq". However, they condemned the attack on the U.S. embassy by Iraqi supporters of the Hashd group saying, "we are staying here in the hub of the peaceful protest movement " and added that the "crowds in the Green Zone do not represent us. We want peaceful change." Rumors speculated that on that day, some protesters had broken into the US embassy compound.[138] However, sometime later the US ministry of foreign affairs announced that protesters had not entered the actual embassy building in Baghdad and that the US ambassador was still at his post.[139]

Timeline 2020

January

4 January: A funeral procession for Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis and Soleimani was held in Baghdad with thousands of mourners in attendance, waving Iraqi and PMF flags [140] and chanting "No to America, ".[141] The procession started at the Al-Kadhimiya Mosque in Baghdad. Iraq's prime minister, Adil Abdul-Mahdi, and leaders of the PMF attended the funeral procession.[142] They were taken to the holy Shia cities of Najaf [143] and Karbala were held funeral prayers on them.[144]

5 January: Following the 3 January assassination by the United States (US) of Iranian major general Qasem Soleimani and of the head of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, protests continued in Nassiriyah, Dewaniya, Kut, Amarah, Karbala and Baghdad with a deliberate shift to protesting against both the Iranian and US roles in Iraq. Earlier protests tended to mostly oppose Iranian influence in Iraq. The earlier slogan "Out, out Iran" was replaced by "No to Iran, no to America".[145] Protestors in Basra and Nassiriyah blocked symbolic funeral processions for Soleimani and al-Muhandis. In Nasiriyah, protesters clashed with a funeral procession in honour of Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis. The local headquarters of the PMF was set alight [146] and protestors in Najaf burnt tyres and blocked main roads to protest against Iran.[146] In reaction to the airstrikes, the Iraqi parliament called for the expulsion of US troops from the country.[74]

7 January After holding funeral processions across Iran, Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei held funeral prayers among hundreds of thousands of people and crying in front of the Iraqi flag-draped coffin for the deceased.[147][148] Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis' body was returned to Iraq and transferred to his hometown of Basra.[149] His burial was delayed because of the huge crowd at the funeral.[144] On 8 January, Al-Muhandis was buried in Iraq's Najaf where hundreds of mourners gathered to pay their final respects. Funeral processions were also held in several Iraqi cities prior to Najaf, including Baghdad and Karbala.[150]

12 January: Hundreds of Iraqis in Basra mourned the death of the correspondent for local television station al-Dijla, Ahmad Abdessamad, and his cameraman Safaa Ghali.[151] A mourner stated that the attack was obviously an attempt to keep people silent, France 24 reported.[152] Iraq's Ministry of Interior invited journalists to a conference in Basra, in order to discuss the killings, as well as the security conditions of the city. However, the ministry was left with no choice but to cancel the conference because journalists refused to attend.[153]

17 January: At least two people were killed and dozens injured after the security forces fire upon protesters at Sinak bridge in central Baghdad.[154] In the southern city of Najaf, Iraqi protesters attacked the Kata'ib Hezbollah militia's center and set it afire. Next day protestors continued by burning posters of Qassem Soleimani.[155]

20 January: Four protesters and two police officers were killed in fresh clashes in Baghdad. Medical sources disclosed that over 50 people were injured, according to Arab News.[156][157] Iraqi security forces reportedly fired tear gas and threw stun grenades, in response to the petrol bombs thrown at them by protesters in Baghdad's Tayaran Square.[158] In the southern parts of Iraq however, hundreds of protesters in Karbala, Amara and Nasiriyah shut down major roads and burned tyres. The protesters maintained that Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi has failed in nominating a new government that would be welcomed by Iraqis, among several other promises.[159][160]

On 21 January, Iraqi police confirmed that three Katyusha rockets landed inside the fortified Green Zone housing government buildings and foreign delegations in Baghdad, according to the guardian.[161] No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, although Iranian-backed militias have been accused by the US of carrying out similar attacks on the Green Zone over the past few months.[162]

22 January: Iraq's High Commission for Human Rights announced that at least 10 people have been killed in the violent unrest across the country within the last two days, Al Jazeera reported.[163] Iraq's President Barham Salih, attended a meeting with US President Donald Trump at Davos 22 January, where they discussed the strategic foreign relations between Iraq and the US, which was perceived by Iran-backed militias as a clear indication that Salih wants the US military to remain in Iraq, despite warning him not to meet with Trump.[164]

23 January: Amnesty International warned that Iraqi security forces have continued their series of operations involving the use of deadly violence against peaceful protesters, based on substantiating video analysis and eyewitness reports confirmed by the organization.[165] According to the San Diego Union-Tribune, at least 8 people were believed to have been wounded when security forces used tear gas to disperse protesters on the Mohammed al-Qassim Highway.[166]

24 January: Shia leader Muqtada al-Sadr; alongside Pro-PMF leaders' call for a "million-man" march was answered, as hundreds of thousands of Iraqis marched to the streets demanding the withdrawal of US troops from Iraq.[167][168] The Green zone which houses the US embassy alongside the path of the march was heavily surrounded by security forces, CNN added.[169] According to the BBC, among those protesting in the city of Baghdad are Iranian-backed militias, with many others carrying Iraq's national flags and placards criticizing the presence of US troops in the country.[170][171]

According to the Guardian, a statement by the influential Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr was read out by his representative on the stage at the place of the protest, calling for the closure of Iraqi airspace to US military and surveillance aircraft, the annulment of Iraqi's security agreement with the US, as well as the departure of all foreign forces from the country, and so on.[172] A rough estimate suggested that the turnout of the protesters had reached 2.5 million.[173]

25 January: Iraqi security forces raided a protest site in Baghdad and tried to remove protesters in southern cities, firing tear gas and live bullets, killing four and wounding dozens more. The raid came after Muqtada al-Sadr ordered his followers to withdraw.[174] It was reported that al-Sadr's followers packed up their tents and departed the camps after the withdrawal of his support.[175] The withdrawal of Iraq's Sadrists in their support for the anti-government protest movement has left many pondering, as to whether a government crackdown will follow.[176]

26 January: In Baghdad rockets hit the United States embassy wounding at least one. One rocket was said to hit the embassy cafeteria, while two other rockets landed nearby, a security source was cited as saying by the AFP news agency.[177][178] According to CNN, the wounded individual sustained a minor injury and had already resumed duty, a US official added.[179] The Independent High Commission for Human Rights of Iraq stated that over the last three days, 9 protesters were killed in Baghdad and 3 others in Nasiriyah in the Iraqi protests, leaving 230 others wounded.[180]

27 January: In the city of Nasiriyah, south of Iraq, security forces opened fire at a crowd of anti-government protesters and killed one person.[181][182] US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called on Iraqi PM Abdul Mahdi to uphold Iraq's sovereignty in light of attacks from Iran on US facilities in Iraq, including the rocket attacks against the US embassy in Baghdad the day before.[183]

31 January: the Human Rights Watch urged the Iraqi authorities to investigate unlawful use of force and all killings at the hands of security forces, with the aid of international experts if need be.[184] On Friday, security forces fired tear gas to disperse the crowd at Baghdad's Khilani and Wathba squares, leaving at least 11 protesters injured, medical and security officials stated.[185]

February

1 February: Iraq's President Barham Salih, appointed a former Minister of Communications Mohammed Tawfiq Allawi, as the country's new Prime Minister.[186] However, anti-government protesters promptly rejected the appointment of Mohammed Allawi as the new prime-minister designate, by holding rallies in Baghdad, as well as in cities across the country's southern provinces.[187] Later in the evening, in an address to Iraqis on state television, Allawi pledged to form a representative government, hold early parliamentary elections, ensure justice for the unlawful acts against protesters, among all other claims by the protesters.[188]

2 February: Protesters who were against Allawi's nomination started grouping their tents together away from the tents occupied by Sadrists in Baghdad's Tahir square.[189]

3 February: Al Jazeera reported that since the onset of the protests, the death toll is now believed to have reached 536, alongside 13 members of the security forces, as announced by the Iraqi state television.[190] Sadrists who were identified wearing "blue hats," stormed an anti-regime rally which led to the demise of a protester who was stabbed to death, leaving three others injured, security and medical sources stated.[191]

4 February: A day after a demonstrator was killed, tensions between Sadr supporters and protesters against Allawi's nomination increased, as the rift erupted into a fistfight between the two opposing groups in the southern city of Diwaniyah.[192] According to Arab News, despite the interference of security forces, the young anti-regime protesters chanted against Sadr, Iraqi authorities, including Iran, which they blamed for supporting the government's harsh actions towards protesters.[193] Furthermore, in order to ensure schools were fully reopened in Diwaniyah after sit-ins had forced them to shut down, security forces were sighted outside the schools, as well as government offices.[194]

5 February: Violence erupted in the holy city of Najaf, as al-Sadr's followers tried to forcibly remove demonstrators from their protest camps.[195] Medical sources stated that at least 8 people were killed during the clash, leaving at least 20 more injured, according to Reuters News Agency.[196] Out of the 8 protesters who were killed, 7 of them were believed to have died as a result of bullets to either the chest or head, France 24 added.[197] The number of injured people had reached 52, according to The New York Times.[198]

Mohammed Allawi, Iraq's PM-designate, held a meeting with several representatives of the protest movement from the various provinces across the country.[199] Similar clashes involving al-Sadr's followers attempting to suppress the protests were reported to have taken place across other parts of the country as well, including Karbala, Diwaniyah, Dhi Qar, Baghdad, among others, according to the Kurdistan 24.[200]

6 February: Following the violence that erupted the day before between anti-government protesters and followers of Moqtada al-Sadr, hundreds of anti-government protesters returned to the site of the violence, as they rallied through the streets of the holy city of Najaf, in an attempt to rebuild their protest camp that was destroyed.[201] In the evening, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, issued a statement condemning the killing of anti-government protesters in the city of Najaf and called on the Iraqi government to see to the need of protesters, as well as punish those responsible for the killings.[202]

7 February: With Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani being one of the most powerful and influential figures in Iraq, several protesters and Iraqi activists were clinging on to him as their last beacon of hope, as they urged him to call for a million-strong march against the Iraqi government ahead of Friday's sermon.[203] During the Friday sermon, in remarks presented by al-Sistani's representative in the holy city of Karbala, he denounced the clash with Sadrists in Najaf two days before and held security forces responsible for failing to prevent the death of 8 protesters.[204] It was projected by the Iraqi Human Rights Commission on Friday that almost 550 people lost their lives since the beginning of the anti-government protests in Iraq, which started in October last year.[205] Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, further called on Allawi to create a government that will be trusted by the people, and represent them as well.[206]

Following the Friday sermon of influential Shia cleric Ali al-Sistani', a lot of anti-government protesters and activists are feeling hopeful and convinced that the protest movement which started in early October, will now regain its momentum, Al Jazeera reported.[207] The president of the Kurdistan Regional Government Nechirvan Barzani, has issued a statement condemning the unlawful use of force against peaceful protesters on Wednesday, even though the Kurdish authorities have adopted similar approaches.[208]

9 February: Moqtada Al-Sadr suggested in a tweet, 18 points which the Iraqi protesters should stick to during protests, including the avoidance of free mixing between men and women in protest sites.[209]

10 February: A protester was shot dead near a protest site at the al-Ain University in the city of Nasiriyah, as Iraqi security forces fired live ammunition to break up a gathering of protesters, according to The New York Times.[210] The security forces were believed to have started shooting at the protesters when they attempted creating a blockage at the entrance of the university.[211] American citizens living in Iraq have been advised by the U.S. embassy in Iraq, to remain vigilant ahead of huge protests that are expected to hold for the next three days in Baghdad, as well as Najaf.[212]

However, the Iranian consulate in Iraq that was set ablaze last year by protesters is now functional, as Visa operations continue, while regular consular services are expected to commence from next week, according to Bloomberg. The Najaf police have been charged with the responsibility of providing security and protection for the consulate after its reopening, Lieutenant Najm Al-Saadi added.[213][214]

11 February: Influential Shia cleric Moqtada Al-Sadr, has dissolved the Blue caps unit which has been accused of violence that led to the death of anti-government protesters last week in Najaf, and also publicly rejected what is known as the Sadrist movement on Twitter.[215] Member of the Iraqi Council of Representatives, Sarkawt Shamsulddin speaking at the Atlantic Council on 11 February, maintained that the huge protests that have been going on since October last year which ended the previous government, presents Mohammed Allawi with the golden chance of bringing about tangible transformation in Iraq.[216]

12 February: Protest sites in Baghdad have been reopened by Iraqi security forces, allowing anti-government protests continue in al-Tahir square only on the condition that protection will be provided by the Iraqi security forces. Protesters were seen collaborating with security forces in order to ensure free movement across the Sinak bridge that has been closed down for months.[217]

13 February: Iraqi women have come out in hundreds to criticize the use of force against protesters in Baghdad and the city of Nasiriyah, in order to challenge the call made by Moqtada al-Sadr against the mixing of men and women in protest sites. Male anti-government protesters also joined the rally, with some of the women seen wearing veils, while others had their faces wrapped in black and white scarves.[218][219] A usual incident happened on the protest site, which involved both men and women setting their camps side by side one another.[220] According to the Daily Sabah, several protesters carried Iraqi flags and roses, marching for over an hour, with the men linking their arms around the women to form a circle.[221] Later in the evening, al-Sadr condemned the rally on his Twitter account, which he described as a sin and an attempt at compromising the righteousness of Iraq.[222]

40 days after Iranian general Qassem Soleimani and Iraq's paramilitary leader were killed by US drones, hundreds of Iraqis in Baghdad came out to the site to mark 40 days remembrance of their death.[223]

14 February: Haaretz disclosed that Iraqi security forces were preparing in anticipation of a violent clash between the protest movement and followers of al-Sadr the next day, as two large-scale protests were expected to take place [224]

15 February: A 50-year-old Iraqi with German residence tried to set himself ablaze during the Munich Security Conference near Karlsplatz, Germany.[225] The German police were able to prevent him as the man immersed himself in Petrol and attempted rushing into a gathering with a lighter in his hand, The Baghdad Post added.[226]

16 February: Alaa al-Rikaby, the prominent activist in Nasiriyah was backed to replace the premier-designate Mohammed Allawi by Hundreds of protesters who demonstrated on the streets carrying al-Rikaby's photo.[227] Meanwhile, shopkeepers in Al Rasheed Street, one of the oldest streets in Baghdad, have decried the lack of improvement in trade, regardless of the reopening of roads and bridges nearby.[228]

17 February: Based on plausible accusations received by the United Nations envoy to Iraq, of peaceful protesters being fired at with hunting rifles, firebombs and stones last weekend, the Iraqi government has been urged to look into the matter to ensure the protection of peaceful protesters.[229] In a statement issued by UNAMI, because of similar use of force, at least 150 people were wounded in the holy city of Karbala last month.[230] Following a meeting between the speaker of the Iraqi parliament Mohammed al-Halbusi and a 13-year-old protester popularly known as Hamid Daghethoum, the speaker pledged his full backing for the demands made by protesters.[231]

20 February: Protesters in the city of Nasiriyah, which has been a focal point of the anti-government protests in the south, were still demanding for one of their own to become the prime minister, regardless of the increasing force applied by security forces.[232] According to Kurdistan24, a delegation of the Kurdistan Region has accused Allawi of not recognizing the political and legal position of the Kurdistan region, after its visit to the capital to hold talks with the Iraqi PM, which was abruptly shortened.[233]

22 February: Iraqi protesters decided to move the center of their protests from Baghdad to Nasiriyah in Dhi Qar province, with hundreds of protesters arriving from Najaf and more expected from other cities as well.[234]

23 February: New clashes erupted between anti-government protesters and security forces at Khilani Square in Baghdad central, where one person was killed and at least 6 others injured.[235] Live ammunition was fired by Iraqi security forces to break up the crowd that was gathered close to Sinak bridge which was opened again recently by security forces after being closed down by protesters for several months.[236] A commendable 24 -year-old Iraqi Nurse Hannah Jassem, was reported to have assisted in stitching up injuries in an open-fronted shack at the protest site in Tahrir Square over the weekend.[237] Also, more than 1,000 students marched through Tahrir Square, holding up pictures of victims who they believed were martyred in the demonstrations.[236]

On the same day, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called Mohammed Allawi to congratulate him on his appointment as the Prime Minister-designate, according to The Sun Herald. During the call, both parties assented to the significance of improving the conditions, well-being and security for the people of Iraq by the government.[238][239]

25 February: Despite reports that five people tested positive for coronavirus, as well as heavy rainfall, thousands of anti-government protesters came out to protest in Baghdad, wearing face masks.[240] According to the Middle East Monitor, the confidence vote for the newly formed cabinet of Prime Minister-designate Mohammed Allawi, which was planned for the day by the Iraqi parliament, was delayed by two days.[241]

26 February: Prime Minister-designate Mohammed Allawi, disclosed that the Iraqi parliament tomorrow will hold a vote to confirm his new cabinet, which he maintained will consist of autonomous ministers.[242]

27 February: Several lawmakers who were not satisfied with Allawi's ministerial list abstained from attending the session, which led to the postponement of the session by the Iraqi parliament. Prior to the vote, Mohammed Allawi reportedly sent a letter to the British embassy requesting the annulment of his British citizenship, the National added.[243][244] There was anticipation that Iraq's speaker of parliament Mohammed Al-Halbousi, would bring up the issue of Mohammed Allawi's dual citizenship during the session, according to The New Arab.[245] An official complaint has been filed with Iraq's attorney by the Iraqi parliament, following the accusation made by Muhammed Allawi, that lawmakers are collecting bribes in order to thwart his regime.[246]

March

1 March: The Iraqi parliament for the second time this week, failed to endorse Mohammed Allawi's new cabinet. That left him with no choice but to step down as the Prime Minister-designate.[247] According to The Jakarta Post, Allawi in a letter he sent to President Saleh stating the reason for his resignation, he accused some political factions of not having the will of the people at heart and neglecting the importance of the reform. He also urged the President to accept his apology for being unable to establish a new cabinet, while admitting that he is unfit for the role he has been tasked with.[248][249] Following Allawi's proclamation, protesters in Tahrir Square showed excitement and joy, as they had already disapproved of his nomination and his entire cabinet, the BBC added.[250] However, in accordance with the Iraqi constitution, President Barham Salih is expected to propose a new prime minister within the next 15 days.[251] The governor of Basra province Asaad al-Eidani, is said to be one of the many names speculated to replace Mohammed Allawi, despite his objection by demonstrators prior to the appointment of Allawi, according to The New York Times.[252]

2 March: Early in the morning, just hours after Prime Minister Candidate Mohammad Tawfiq Allawi withdrew his nomination for the position, two Katyusha rockets reportedly struck the heavily fortified Green Zone in central Baghdad, leaving zero casualties, according to DW. One of the rockets was believed to have landed close to the US embassy, Reuters added.[253][254]

3 March: The United Nations envoy for Iraq criticized the Iraqi parliament for failing to reach a quorum, which hampers the ability of the government to make decisions, hence, leading the Iraqi people into an unpredictable future.[255]

5 March: Protesters took to the streets again early in the morning in Basra province, blocking vital roads, burning tires, as well as urging the immediate appointment of an independent to create a new government.[256]

8 March: A clash erupted between Iraqi security forces and protesters, which left 16 protesters injured, when the security forces fired tear gas at the protesters in Baghdad's Al-Khilani Square, according to the MEM.[257]

10 March: In Maysan province of Southern Iraq, unknown gunmen killed two anti-government activists, Abdel-Aaddous Qasim and Karrar Adil, according to a security source in Iraq.[258] Shia armed groups linked with Iran have been blamed by some activists of being responsible for the attack, but the groups have falsified these claims.[259]

17 March: Former governor of the holy city of Najaf Adnan al-Zurfi, was appointed by President Barham Salih, to succeed Mohammed Allawi as the new prime minister-designate of Iraq.[260] Al-Zurfi, who was the parliamentary head of the Nasr coalition that was created by former PM Haider al-Abadi, also has 30 days to form a new cabinet that is subject to approval by the parliament.[261] According to the BBC, larger groups were unable to concur on choosing Abdel Mahdi's successor, which subsequently led to the appointment of Zurif by President Saleh.[262] However, Protesters in Tahrir Square turned down al-Zurfi's nomination, regarding him as part and parcel of the corrupt regime they've been trying to sweep away.[263] The U.N. special envoy to Iraq Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert, applauded Zurif's nomination, adding that the country requires a powerful and efficient PM.[264]

New evidence has come to light, as a result of an investigation conducted by Amnesty International and SITU Research which showed that Iraqi security forces have been intentionally using smoke grenades and heavy tear gas to kill protesters, instead of breaking up crowds since October last year when the protests commenced. The research encompassed thorough video analysis and a 3D reconstruction of incidents near Baghdad's Tahrir Square and Jimhouriya Bridge, according to Urdu Point News.[265][266] Based on their findings, the grenades which were produced by Serbians and Iranians, saw to the fatal destruction of at least two dozen demonstrators in the place of the incident since October last year.[267]

21 March: Protesters in Tahrir Square and other parts of Iraq disclosed that their anti-government protests had officially come to an end, as they have decided to go back to their homes until the coronavirus has been defeated.[268]

29 March: Regardless of the COVID-19 pandemic and curfew in Iraq, few protesters in Baghdad have decided to adopt a systematic way of maintaining the protest camps while engaging the security forces, as well as the deadly virus.[269] Prime Minister-designate Adnan al-Zurfi pledged to use all resources at his disposal within both the public and private sector, as he announces the initiation of a government program to effectively tackle the coronavirus outbreak.[270]

April

4 April: Prime Minister-designate Adnan Zurfi handed over his plans to the Iraqi parliament as demonstrators refused to obey curfew imposed by the government, leading to the eruption of violence with security forces. Several Iraqi security forces were reported to have sustained injuries in the process of firing tear gas at protesters in Nasiriya, who responded by throwing gasoline bombs at them, according to The Baghdad Post.[271][272] Despite anti-government protests having been officially put on hold earlier last week in order to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic, protesters continue to remain in major protest sites, as they claim that the killings of activists are yet to stop.[273]

6 April: The American oil company located in the oil-rich Basra province of southern Iraq, came under attack as five rockets were reportedly fired close to the site, Iraqi military confirmed.[274] The Security forces added that at least three Katyusha missiles were fired, leaving zero casualties, according to the MEM.[275] Following the attack, a rocket launcher with 11 unused missiles was also discovered by the Iraqi security forces along the Zubair-Shuaiba road, but they were able to defuse them.[276] However, no group has been linked to the attack yet.[277]

7 April: A strategic dialogue between Washington and the Iraqi government is scheduled to take place in June, the US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo disclosed. He added that several issues are expected to be ironed out, including the position of US military forces currently staying in Iraq.[278][279] Considering the growing tensions in the region, Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi has also expressed his support for the initiation of a dialogue between the two countries, according to The Jerusalem Post.[280]

9 April: Prime minister-designate Adnan al-Zurfi tendered his resignation, which a few hours later led to the nomination of Intelligence chief Mustafa al-Kadhimi as his successor, by President Barham Saleh.[281] According to Zurfi's statement, his country's best interests are what prompted his decision to resign, including internal and external reasons. Zurfi further extended his sincere apologies to all Iraqis that invested their trust in him.[282][283] After al-Kadhimi's nomination, he assured Iraqis that he would primarily ensure that he meets their demands and also establish a well functioning government.[284] Considering that Kadhimi has the support of several political parties in Iraq, he is predicted to not suffer the same fate as his former predecessors, according to VOA News.[285]

10 April: Prime Minister-designate Mustafa al-Kadhimi was officially congratulated on his new appointment, when he received a phone call from top Kurdish officials, according to the Middle East Monitor.[286] Although Kadhimi is the third candidate within the last 10 weeks, he is most likely to flourish in establishing a new government seeing that he was presented by President Salih at a formal ceremony in the midst of many high profile and famous politicians.[287] According to Aljazeera, al-Khadhimi has maintained that he will be able to form a new government by 25 April, which is two weeks earlier before the 30 days given to him to form a new cabinet as stipulated in the constitution.[288]

11 April: In an effort to begin the formation of a new cabinet, Iraqi Prime Minister-designate Mustafa al-Kadhimi held a meeting with the Minister of Finance Fuad Hussein. Kadhimi emphasized during the meeting that his new government would be that which caters for the needs of the general public, by providing essential services.[289][290] According to Kurdistan 24, the finance minister revealed that his meeting with al-Kadhimi was a friendly one, as they talked about the specific steps to be taken regarding the formation of his new government and the problems Iraq is facing.[212]

15 April: Turkey reportedly violated Iraq's airspace when Turkish drones and airplanes carried out an airstrike near the Makhmour Refugee Camp, according to The Jerusalem Post.[291] Two women in the refugee camp were said to have lost their lives during the incident, according to the air defense command in Iraq.[292]

16 April: The Iraqi foreign ministry reacted to the attack carried out near a refugee camp in Iraq by Turkish drones on Wednesday evening, as the foreign minister Muhammad Al-Hakim summoned the Turkish ambassador to Iraq.[293] Furthermore, the foreign ministry called on Turkey to recognize Iraq's sovereignty, collaboration in enforcing border security and putting a stop to the attacks on Iraqi regions.[citation needed]

21 April: A few hours after the restrictions regarding coronavirus were slightly relaxed, at least one protester was reportedly killed during violence with protesters who took to the streets near Tahrir Square in Baghdad by unidentified gunmen, leaving many others injured.[294][295] The restrictions were relaxed due to the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which is expected to last until 22 May at the end of the holy month, The Jerusalem Post added.[296][297] In Baghdad, movements will only be permitted from 6 am to 7 am from Sundays to Thursdays and all day long on Friday-Saturday. However, schools and universities are not expected to reopen and all flights will stay shut down, according to Reuters. Government buildings will only keep up the capacity of their staff to a maximum of 25%.[298][299]

May

7 May: The newly formed cabinet of Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi was confirmed by the Iraqi parliament. 266 members of parliament out of a total of 329 members were present for the session, seeing to the approval of the majority of ministers submitted by al-Kadhimi.[300][301] According to Kurdistan 24, only 5 out of 22 ministerial nominees were rejected by the parliament. The ministers rejected included those for agriculture, trade, culture, migration and justice.[302][303] Since the resignation of the previous PM amidst large anti-government protests in November 2019, al-Kadhimi is regarded as the first real prime minister in Iraq.[304] The new PM affirmed that his primary focus as prime minister would be to fight the COVID-19 outbreak, as well as bringing those responsible for the unlawful killing of protesters in anti-government protests to justice.[305] The U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo expressed his support for the new cabinet during a call with al-Kadhimi, according to Reuters.[306]

9 May: After the assumption of office on Thursday, the new Iraqi prime minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi presided over his first cabinet meeting.[307] During the meeting, al-Kadhimi emphasized that his top priority as PM is to hold early parliamentary elections, by backing the Independent High Electoral Commission of Iraq (IHEC). Other vital issues such as health, security and economic situation were also addressed in the meeting. Kadhimi also reportedly held meetings with the ambassadors of both US and Iran, Matthew H. Tueller and Iraj Masjedi, VOA News added.[308][309][310] Furthermore, with the exception of those accused of killings during the anti-government protests that lasted for several months, al-Kadhimi has promised that his cabinet will see to the release of innocent protesters that have been in detention.[311]

10 May: Following the promise made by the new Iraqi prime minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi to free protesters that have been detained during the anti-government protests which began in October 2019, protesters gathered in hundreds in Baghdad's Tahrir Square. Despite the firm security put in place, several protesters also gathered in the streets of cities such as Diwaniyah, Muthanna, Wasit, Dhi Qar, according to the MEM.[312][313] During the demonstration, the protesters called for immediate reforms by the government, prosecution of those accused of being responsible for the unlawful killings of hundreds of protesters.[314] Meanwhile, protesters in the southern province of Basra called for governor Asaad al-Eidani's dismissal from office, alongside his two deputies, according to Kurdistan 24. The calls for the removal of the Basra governor were made after armed men opened fire at the building of Iranian-backed militia Thaa'r Allah, leaving one protester dead and four others wounded.[315][316]

Amidst the renewal of fresh anti-government protests in Iraq, the Supreme Judiciary Council on Sunday, issued a statement ordering courts to see to the release of protesters that were arrested since protests began last year. The release of the protesters by the Iraqi judiciary was ordered based on demands made by the new prime minister al-Kadhimi, the Washington Post added.[317][318] Also, Mustafa al-Kadhimi promoted the Iraqi general Lt. Gen. Abdul Wahab al-Saadi who played a vital role in the war against Islamic State and was subsequently demoted last year by Abdul-Mahdi.[319]

11 May: Following the killing of one protester outside the building of a local party's headquarters in Basra on Sunday, Iraqi security forces raided the building, detaining at least five men accused of carrying out the shootings. Prime minister Al-Kadhimi confirmed that the raid by the security forces was carried out based on his orders in accordance with judicial warrants, Al-Monitor added.[320][321] A statement from the White House revealed that President Trump spoke with the new Iraqi prime minister over the phone, in order to congratulate him on the endorsement of his new cabinet by the Iraqi parliament, according to Reuters.[322] During the call, Trump pledged the support of the U.S. in assisting Iraq in their fight against the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as combating ISIS.[323] However, according to Kurdistan 24, a strategic dialogue between the US and Iraq is scheduled to hold in June, in order to strengthen their relationship.[324]

18 May: The building of the Saudi-owned MBC channel in Baghdad was swamped by disgruntled protesters in response to the documentary broadcast by the channel, regarding the bombing of French and U.S. embassies in 1983. The angry protesters portrayed the documentary as an insult to the late Shia leader Abu Mahdi al Muhandis, which depicted him as a terrorist.[325][326][327] Photos of al-Muhandis and Iraqi flags were waved by the protesters, demanding for the closure of the channel, as well as chanting slogans against Saudi Arabia during the protest.[328] The MBC channel disclosed that no injuries were recorded during the demonstration, according to the Daily Star.[326] According to Anadolu Agency, In an attempt to control the protest, security forces were dispatched to the site even though the demonstrators had already made their way into the building, severely damaging all equipment inside.[329]

However, there are no certainties as to whether the protesters who stormed the building are associated with any Iranian-backed organisation in Iraq.[330]

23 May: A report from the Human Rights office of the UN Assistance Mission in Iraq, revealed the disappearance of over 100 people, with several others tortured by armed groups since protests began in October last year. All of the tortured or abducted victims were either involved in the anti-government protests or had provided a form of assistance to protesters, the UNAMI added.[331][332] According to Kurdistan 24, the report showed that 123 people went missing between 1 October 2019, and 21 March 2020, while 98 of them have been found, 25 others are yet to be found.[333] The male victims confirmed that they were tortured, beaten and electrocuted, whereas the female victims also confirmed being tortured and even molested or compelled with rape.[334]

26 May: After revising the report provided by the United Nations Human Rights Office in Iraq on Saturday, the new government of Mustafa al-Kadhimi has promised to launch an investigation into the incidents covered in the report thoroughly. The office of the new PM added that the investigations will be absolutely independent, without any bias.[335][336] The UN Security Council has urged the Iraqi government to ensure that the investigations are as accurate as possible.[337]

June

15 June: Human Rights Watch (HRW), a US-based rights group, released a 42-page document which suggested that the previous Iraqi government had denied activists and journalists their right to critics, as well as free speech.[338] The group has called on both the Iraqi and Kurdistan Region to enforce reforms of its penal code including other laws, such that they will be in accordance with international law.[339]

July

6 July: The renowned Iraqi expert on armed groups Hisham al-Hashimi was reportedly shot dead in the capital Baghdad.[340] The incident took place near Hashimi's residence in the district of Zayouna, when two armed men riding a motorbike shot him, after which he sustained grave injuries and was taken to the Ibn Al-Nafees Hospital in Baghdad where he died. The CCTV footage of the incident suggested that Hashimi's killers were highly trained professionals, as they shot him several times at a point-blank distance, Arab news added.[341][342][343] Iraqi security officials stated that prior to al-Hashimi's assassination, he was believed to have received threats from Iran-backed militias, according to the guardian. Also, a source told TRT World that a month ago, Hashimi revealed the amount of Iraq's revenue that was absconded by Iran-backed militias.[344][345]

7 July: Following the assassination of al-Hashimi, Iraqi protesters on Tuesday, criticized Iran's supreme leader al-Khamenei, describing him as a killer and blaming Iran-backed groups for the death of al-Hashimi.[346]

12 July: A protest spokesman disclosed that Iraqi security forces killed two people and injured several others when they opened fire on a gathering of protesters in southern Baghdad, Rudaw reported. Thousands of protesters gathered in Baghdad from different provinces of southern Iraq, in order to reject the termination of a government-allocated compensation which was declared by the Iraqi PM Mustafa al-Kadhimi, as part of an economic reform package.[347] However, the Iraqi army has denied using live ammunition on protesters, claiming that no one was killed, and that they only turned the protesters away when they attempted to attack security forces, according to army spokesman Yehya Rasoul.[348]

21 July: German art curator and activist Hella Mewis was reportedly abducted in Baghdad, according to the Euro News. She was said to have been kidnapped outside her office in central Baghdad by unknown militants.[349][350] However, it is not yet clear as to who is responsible for her abduction, The Times reported.[351]

24 July: Iraqi forces reportedly rescued the kidnapped German art curator Hella Mewis, spokesman of Iraq's military Yahya Rasool, confirmed in a statement. No further comments were given, as no group has claimed responsibility for the abduction.[352][353] The overnight operation was said to have been supported by an investigative court in Baghdad, while investigations are still ongoing, according to Abdelsattar Bayraqdar, the spokesman for Iraq's Supreme Judicial Council.[354] According to Iraq's interior ministry, the operation in east Baghdad was conducted by a joint task force composed of anti-crime units, federal police, as well as the elite Falcons intelligence forces. Subsequently, in the afternoon, Mewis was handed over to the German embassy in Baghdad and the German foreign minister Heiko Maas, hailed the efforts made by both the Iraqi government and security forces.[355][356]

In the first rallies since Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi was elected, at least two protesters were killed in Baghdad during overnight demonstrations on 26 July. In addition, dozens of people were wounded after officials fired live rounds at the demonstrators who were assembled in Tahrir Square. Several members of the security forces were also said to have sustained minor injuries, according to the police. Al-Kadhimi said his administration would investigate Sunday's events and prosecute the guilty party.[357][358] A medical source disclosed on Monday that out of the two protesters who died, one was killed after being shot with a tear gas canister in the head, while the other was shot in the neck, according to Arab News.[359] Yehia Rasool, spokesman of the Iraqi military revealed in a statement that precise instructions had been issued regarding the unlawful use of force by security forces against demonstrators, except when absolutely necessary.[360]

30 July: The Iraqi government announced its decision to treat those killed during protests as martyrs and compensate each family with 10 million dinars ($8,380).[361] Also, the committee that was tasked with looking into the death of two protesters on Sunday, disclosed that three policemen had been suspended for the use of hunting rifles against demonstrators and are currently awaiting trial. The Interior Minister Othman Al Ghanimi who made the announcement, also added that the issue had been handed over to the Judiciary, with arrest warrants sent out to the three perpetrators.[362][363] During the press conference, the minister stated that the suspects included two majors and a lieutenant and also revealed the arms and ammunition used by them.[364] Meanwhile, protesters have declared that they would not stop the demonstrations, maintaining that the investigation into the violence does not offer a solution to the country's numerous grievances, according to The Independent.[365]

31 July: Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi announced that legislative elections would be held early, and scheduled them for 6 June 2021.[366] There has not been any confirmation though, on whether al-Kadhimi would seek for a second term despite holding early elections.[367]

August

11 August: A drone attack was reportedly launched in the Kurdish region in northern Iraq which claimed the lives of two top officers of the Iraqi military forces.[368] Following the attack, the 13 August scheduled visit by the Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar to Baghdad was said to have been called off by Iraq. Also, the Turkish ambassador was summoned for the third time over Turkey's military actions in the country, Arab News added.[369][370] Despite the drone attack, Turkey has maintained that it would not stop its cross-border operations against the PKK fighters in the region and has further called on the Iraqi authorities to extend their cooperation.[371]

19 August: Unknown gunmen reportedly shot and killed a female anti-government political activist in Iraq's southern city Basra. Three others were said to have been injured when the gunmen on a motorcycle opened fire on their vehicle, with the victim Reham Yacoub inside. According to Al Jazeera, the three others injured were all women, although one of them died.[372][373]

21 August: In Basra protesters set fire to a local parliament office after gathering to demand the resignation of governor Asaad Al Eidani for the killing of two activists the previous week.[374] The protesters were able to set the outer gate of the parliament building ablaze, as they clashed with security forces. At least 8 security personnel were believed to have been wounded during the violence, according to Al Jazeera.[375][376] Following the clashes, Iraqi PM Mustafa al-Kadhimi reportedly visited Basra late on Saturday, 22 August and assured that the perpetrators will face punishment over the killings. He also sacked Basra's police chief in response to the continued unrest, the National added.[377][378]

Separately, protesters in the southern city of Nasiriyah were said to have destroyed the offices of Shiite parties, in response to an explosion that left 11 protesters injured in Nasiriyah's Haboubi Square.[379] Eyewitnesses on the scene confirmed that the protesters used bulldozers to demolish the offices of the Dawa Party and Badr Organization, although they had already set the buildings on fire.[380]

September

20 September: Several Iraqi protesters reportedly gathered overnight in the city of Nasiriyah, Dhi Qar province to criticize the abduction of a renowned activist, including the injury of another activist. Three main bridges, alongside roads were said to have been shut down by the protesters as they burnt down tires.[381][382] Two pick up vehicles were used by unidentified persons to abduct the young activist Sajjad al-Iraqi, while leaving the other activist Basim Falaih wounded, after shooting him, according to eyewitnesses.[383] Members of the tribe of deputy leader of the Popular Mobilization Forces, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis who was killed by an American drone attack in January, are being held responsible by some activists in Nasiriyah for Sajjad's abduction.[384] However, security forces have managed to ID the location of the abducted anti-government activist by tracking phone calls, the state media disclosed.[385]

21 September: Following the kidnapping of prominent Iraqi activist Sajjad al-Iraqi, Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi on Monday directed a joint operation consisting of a special anti-terror force and the army's air force to search for the activist who was taken by unknown gunmen in the southern city of Nasiriyah on Saturday.[386] Apart from rescuing the pro-demonstration activist, the units of the Counter-Terrorism Service have also being instructed by the PM to ensure that the kidnappers are captured and brought to face punishment.[387]

Subsequently, two people from Sayed Dakhil district in Dhi Qar province were charged with the abduction of Sajjad al-Iraqi, as their arrest warrants were issued by the Iraqi authorities.[388] In spite of issuing arrest warrants for the two suspects, the Iraqi counter-terrorism service (ICTS) is yet to make any success in finding Sajjad al-Iraqi even though they have continued their search.[389]

28 September: Iraq's Defense Ministry disclosed that a rocket attack close to Baghdad's airport, claimed the lives of five civilians. Two Katyusha rockets were said to have been fired by armed groups which killed three children and two women, leaving two other children injured. The rockets which landed at a house in Baghdad were initially targeted for the Baghdad airport, according to Police sources .[390][391][392] Reports suggested that the rockets were fired from the Al-Jihad neighborhood of Baghdad, Arab News added.[393]

Following the unfortunate incident, Iraqi PM Mustapha al-Kadhimi gave a directive suspending security forces from duty at the airport, according to BBC.[394] The US State Department criticized the attack which was launched just after giving out a warning regarding shutting down its embassy in Baghdad, if the Iraqi government is unable to curb attacks against US and other Coalition members. The Department has also called on the Iraqi authorities to take prompt response and ensure that the perpetrators are brought to face justice.[395][396]

October

1 October: Iraq's protest reached its one-year mark, as thousands of protesters took to the streets in Baghdad, including the southern part of the country to honor the anniversary of protests which began in October 2019.[397] Several protesters waved the Iraqi flag, chanted and sang songs of patriotism by clapping and pledged to follow the path of revolutionaries. Protesters who gathered in Tahrir Square were sighted raising pictures of more than 600 people who died since the beginning of the protests last year in Baghdad and across southern Iraq.[398][399] According to the Middle East Eye, protesters have issued a deadline to the Iraqi government to meet their demands by 25 October, or they embark on a nationwide strike.[400]

11 October: A faction of Iraqi militia groups which are backed by Iran, have presented the Iraqi government with the option of a ceasefire agreement against assault on US forces. The ceasefire option provided by the groups was based on the stipulation of a timeframe for the retreat of US troops being provided by the government.[401][402] No specific deadline has been issued by the groups, but they have threatened to continue carrying out attacks if the US forces refuse to withdraw, according to a spokesman of one of the strongest Iran-backed militia groups in Iraq, Kataib Hezbollah.[403] The spokesman Mohammed Mohi, also added that the ceasefire would consist of the entire factions of the (anti-U.S.) resistance, as well as other groups that have been attacking US troops.[404]

A few hours prior to the announcement of the temporary ceasefire deal by the groups, a convoy that was carrying equipment for the U.S.-led coalition, was reportedly targeted with a roadside bomb, according to the Associated Press. During the attack which occurred in southern Iraq, one vehicle in the convoy was damaged, Iraq's military disclosed.[405][406] However, no casualties were reported, or those responsible for the attack.[407]

17 October: Several supporters of the Popular Mobilization Forces reportedly set the Kurdish party's headquarters in Baghdad ablaze following criticisms from a Kurdish former minister. The protesters of the Iran-backed Shia militia group were frustrated with the remarks made by the former minister Hoshyar Zebari that the Iraqi government should steer clear Baghdad's Green Zone of PMF militias.[408][409] They also burned down Kurdish flags, with others holding pictures of the slain Iranian general Qasem Soleimani, including that of Iraqi lieutenant Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis.[410]

Iraqi high-ranking officials have criticized the attack by the Hashd al-Shaabi protesters and called for an investigation into the attack. Also, President Barzani has criticized the attack on the KDP offices and urged the Iraqi government to carry out a comprehensive probe into the incident.[411][412]

25 October: Thousands of Iraqi protesters took back to the streets of Baghdad, as the anti-government protests reached its one-year mark.[413] At least 42 security personnel, including about a dozen protesters were said to have been wounded after the peaceful protests turned violent when protesters attempted to break through a barricade set up by the security forces, according to The Washington Post. Security forces responded with tear gas after the anti-government protesters threw Molotov cocktails and rocks at them.[414][415] Demonstrations also reportedly took place in several other cities such as Nasiriyah, Basra and Najaf, with protesters decrying the level of corruption in the country.[416]

26 October: The protests which started on Sunday, entered its second day with several protesters clashing with Iraqi security forces again. Demonstrators shifted to the highly fortified Green Zone in Baghdad, where government offices, parliament building and US embassy are located.[417][418] Also, security forces under the Baghdad Operations Command, stopped several protesters coming from Babylon and Diwanieh provinces from making their way into Baghdad, by mounting checkpoints on the roads, AP News added.[419]

November

6 November: In the city of Basra, student anti-government protests kicked off. According to Al Jazeera, one anti-government demonstrator was killed by a bullet during rubber bullet firing many police in demonstrators.

17 November: Following the announcement made by the US to decrease the number of its troops from 3,000 to 2,500, four rockets were believed to have been fired on Iraq's heavily fortified Green Zone in Baghdad. During the attack which was launched just an hour after the announcement made by the US, at least one child was killed, leaving five other civilians wounded, the Iraqi military disclosed.[420][421] The rockets were reportedly fired from the al-Amin al-Thaniyah neighborhood of Baghdad, the VOA News added. Although, the C-RAM air defense system which was set up by the US earlier in 2020, managed to intercept the rockets.[422][423] Despite the US accusing Iran-backed militia for attacks in the past, no Iran-backed militia has taken responsibility for the attack yet.[424]

27 November: Protests in the city of Nasiriyah began in support of Shia popular leader Muqtada al Sadr and demanded that the government should resign. Anti-government demonstrations spread nationwide, according to Al Jazeera. Police has been accused of using live ammunition and shooting as a tactic against the demonstrators. Mass protesters rallied in their thousands and then, chaos and clashes between security forces and protesters left four protesters dead and several demonstrators injured. According to a hospital source, there was indication of protesters dying as a result of bullet wounds.[425] However, with early elections being one of the biggest demands of the anti-government protesters, the Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi has planned for elections to hold next June, which is a year earlier than the initial date.[426]

28 November: Following the overnight killing of protesters, several people reportedly returned to the sites of the anti-government sit-ins, in order to show their support for those killed.[427] As other cities across Iraq take security measures in the deadly clash between anti-government protesters and Sadr supporters, the death toll in the city of Nasiriyah had reached six, according to Al Jazeera.[428]

December

2 December: Several Iraqi civil servants reportedly took to the streets of the Kurdistan Region of northern Iraq, to protest over the delay in payment of salaries. The protesters were said to have gathered at the epicenter of Sulaimani's anti-government protests of 2011, the Saraa square.[429][430] Water cannons, tear gas, rubber bullets, including live rounds was believed to have been used by security forces to break up the gathering of protesters, according to the Middle East Eye.[431]

7 December: Following days of protests in the northern Kurdish region of Iraq, a protester was said to have been killed by armed men who were protecting the headquarters of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP). Two other protesters were also wounded during the unrest.[432][433] According to a statement by the spokesman of the Chamchamal Health Directorate in Sulaymaniyah district, Sherif Rahim, the protester who was killed was a 16-year-old teenager.[434]

8 December: As of Wednesday, the death toll was reported to have reached eight people, since the beginning of the protests against delayed payment of salaries in Kurdish Iraq.[435] In an effort by the Iraqi Kurdish authorities to prevent the violence from extending, a 24-hour ban on movement was imposed in Sulaymaniyah and other nearby towns, which was expected to last until Wednesday midnight.[436] The demonstrations had already extended across six towns surrounding Sulaymaniyah on Tuesday, with disgruntled protesters setting government offices and political parties' headquarters on fire.[437]

Iraq's president, Barham Salih has urged security forces to adhere to the law and avoid applying unlawful use of force against peaceful protesters.[438] The Iraqi president further called on the demonstrators, including the security forces to conduct themselves peacefully and not resort to violence.[439] Also, the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI criticized the unlawful use of force that was applied against the demonstrators in Sulaymaniyah district, as the citizens' right to peaceful protest must be ensured.[440][441]

9 December: According to the Oil Ministry, two explosions hit an oil field in northern Kirkuk province on Wednesday, which they described as a terrorist attack. Despite two small oil wells being set on fire, there was no impact on the entire production from the oil field, VOA News added.[442][443] However, no casualties have been reported during the blast so far.[444]

Meanwhile, the Kurdish Prime Minister Masrour Barzani, has blamed Baghdad for the ongoing violence which erupted due to the delay in payment of salaries in Iraq's northern Kurdish region.[445] Barzani added that the Iraqi government failed to carry out the budget transfers which were required to make the payments of salary possible.[446]

15 December: Salah al-Iraqi, a notable Iraqi activist was reportedly killed by unknown gunmen in Baghdad, according to Al Jazeera.[447] Local media reports suggested that Salah was shot five times by the unknown assailants who were in masks, in the suburb of Baghdad al-Jadeed.[448] Salah al-Iraqi was said to have played a vital role in anti-government protests that began last year against deteriorating economic conditions, corruption and massive unemployment rate.[449] According to the Iraqi Network for Social Media (INSM), prior to al-Iraqi's killing on Tuesday, he had already been targeted twice.[449]

20 December: Just two weeks to the one-year anniversary of the killing of Iranian general Qassem Soleimani, reports have shown that the US Embassy in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone has been under a rocket attack.[450] At least eight Katyusha rockets were said to have been fired at the Green Zone on Sunday, which led to a few damages on the compound, the US embassy and Iraqi military disclosed.[451] According to CNN, at least one Iraqi soldier was wounded when one of the rockets landed close to a security checkpoint.[452] Although, the U.S. Embassy's C-RAM defense system was said to have been activated during the attack in order to intercept the rockets, the ABC News added.[453]

However, in a statement made by the U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, revealed that there had been at least one Iraqi civilian that was injured.[454] Meanwhile, the US embassy has urged all Iraqi leaders to ensure that the perpetrators face justice and also take preventive measures from these kinds of attacks.[455]

Timeline 2021

January

Thousands of Iraqis demanded United States armed forces pull out of the country in protests in Liberation Square, Baghdad, one year after the American drone strike which killed Qasem Soleimani and Iraq's militia commander, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis. The anniversary of their deaths in Baghdad was also marked in Iran and by supporters in Syria, Lebanon, Yemen and elsewhere in the Middle East.[456] The place where both Soleimani and al-Muhandis were killed became a shrine-like area which was sealed off by red ropes, including their pictures in the center by the protesters.[457]

8 January: Just a day after a massive crackdown against activists in Nasiriyah's Habboubi Square, Iraqi security forces clashed with protesters, as they fired tear gas and bullets to disperse the crowd.[458] A day prior to the clashes, Ali al-Hamami, a lawyer and local activist was said to have been killed in his home by unidentified assailants, according to Kurdistan 24.[459]

10 January: As the protest in the southern city of Nasiriyah entered its third day, a policeman was reportedly killed by gunshot to the head, with 33 other policemen wounded, according to the Iraqi army. Additionally, medical sources confirmed that 7 protesters were also injured during the clashes with security forces.[460][461] It was not immediately clear who was behind the killing of the policeman, as the army did not provide further details on the incident.[462] Despite the ongoing violence between the protesters and security forces, protesters who are currently occupying Haboubi Square have maintained not leaving the site until one of their major demands, which is releasing all those who have been detained is met.[463] However, reports have shown that all the detainees have now been released, the Iraqi High Commission for Human Rights (IHCHR) confirmed.[464]

January 19: Following the request made by Iraq's Independent High Electoral Commission for additional to prepare for the polls which are supposed to hold on June 6, the Iraqi cabinet voted unanimously to move the general elections to October 10, 2021. Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi explained in a statement that the postponement was to allow the IHEC adequate time to ensure the conduct of a free and fair election.[465][466] Nevertheless, there are growing concerns among activists and protesters who see the postponement of the elections as a move to overlook their major demands.[467]

21 January: A twin explosion reportedly hit a commercial street close to Tayaran Square in Baghdad. At least 28 people were killed during the attack, with 73 other people wounded, according to the Deutsche Welle.[468][469] The first suicide bomber was said to have detonated his explosives after convincing people to gather around him as he rushed into the market claiming to be sick. Subsequently, the second bomber set off his explosives, as people gathered around the victims of the first attack, the interior ministry disclosed.[470][471]

There haven't been any immediate claims of responsibility by any group yet, for the deadly attack.[472] Medics have expressed their concerns over the possibility of a drastic increase in the death toll from the initial figures, as security forces continue to guard the site of the blast.[473]

February

14 February: Four suspects were detained in southern Iraq's Basra by security forces, on the allegation of killing protesters and activists.[474] According to Al-Monitor, the four suspects have already confessed to the killing of two journalists, Jinan Madhi Al-Shahmani and Ahmad Abdessamad. They are also said to be members of a 16-person network, as the Iraqi intelligence is still trying to identify the rest of the members of the network.[475][476] However, it was not made clear as to whether the four suspects who have been apprehended are linked with any paramilitary force or political party.[477]

15 February: An airport in the city of Erbil, in northern Iraq was hit by a rocket which claimed the life of a civilian contractor with the American-led military coalition forces. At least nine people were wounded during the attack, according to the Guardian. A US service member was also reported to have been among the wounded victims.[478][479] Subsequently, after the rocket attack, the airport was reportedly closed.[480]

16 February: The US alongside its various European counterparts, criticized the attack on the US airbase and assured to assist Iraq with the investigation, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken revealed in a statement.[481]

18 February: Protests reportedly erupted near the Turkish embassy in Baghdad, to condemn the Turkish military intervention in the northern region of Iraq. Roads leading to the Turkish embassy had to be shut down by the Iraqi security forces, according to Arab News.[482][483]

March

April

1 April: Three oil facilities in southern Iraq's Dhi Qar Governorate were reportedly shut down by protesters, due to the federal budget that was approved by the Iraqi parliament on Wednesday.[484] The protesters believed that the new budget did not address the protesters' urgent need for employment opportunities.[485]

4 April: Just a few days ahead of strategic Iraq-U.S. talks, two rockets landed close to the Balad airbase in northern Baghdad.[486] There were no immediate reports of casualties, damage of properties, or claims of responsibility for the attack.[487]

7 April: Five policemen were reportedly charged by an Iraqi investigative committee, in connection to the unlawful discharge of firearms on protesters in the last week of February in Nasiriyah.[488]

12 April: Iraqi President Barham Salih revealed the signing of a decree which is supposed to ensure that early elections are conducted on 10 October.[489] According to Iraq's Independent High Electoral Commission, more than 25 million Iraqis are qualified to vote in the upcoming October elections, with the exception of those staying overseas.[490]

18 April: An Iraqi air base north of Baghdad was targeted by several rockets, according to an Iraqi military commander.[491] According to the Times of Israel, five rockets were fired at the Balad air base housing US troops, with two of them hitting a dormitory and canteen inside the airbase.[492] At least five people were injured during the attack, three of which were Iraqi soldiers and two other foreign contractors.[493]

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack by any group, although Iranian-backed armed groups have claimed responsibility for similar attacks in the past.[494] Also, no casualties were recorded during the incident, Al Jazeera added.[495]

22 April: Another rocket attack was launched close to the Baghdad International Airport, the Iraqi military revealed.[496] At least three rockets were said to have landed near the perimeter of the airport. Also, Iraqi security forces were able to defuse pre-launched rockets which were kept on the rooftop of an unoccupied building that was used for the rocket launch.[497][498] There were no immediate reports of casualties or property damages, according to Reuters.[499]

May

9 May: An Iraqi activist Ihab Al-Wazni who had survived an assassination attempt which killed Fahim al-Ta'i in December 2019, was shot dead outside his home by armed men on motorbikes in Karbala.[500] Following his death, protests erupted in Iraq's Karbala, as protesters went on to burn tires and shut down roads in the city. Trailers of the Iranian consulate in the city were also set ablaze by the protesters, VOA News added.[501][502] Protests were also held in the capital Baghdad, including other cities in southern Iraq, with protesters setting the headquarters of Iran-backed militias and government offices ablaze.[503] The Iraqi police have assured that they will leave no stone unturned, as they are determined to bring the perpetrators behind the killing of Ihab al-Wazni to justice.[504]

10 May: An Iraqi journalist, Ahmed Hassan, was entered into intensive care receiving two bullets in the head and one in the shoulder, as he got out of his car in Al Diwaniyah. According to BBC News, brain surgery was performed on Hassan after being admitted into the intensive care at a hospital in Baghdad.[505][506] Both Hassan and Wazni were said to have played a vital role during the protest against the Iraqi government in October 2019, France 24 added.[507]

15 May: Several Iraqi demonstrators gathered in Baghdad, to show support for Palestinians, over the Israeli airstrikes on Gaza.[508] The rallies were said to have been in response to calls made by influential cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, including other parliamentary leaders. Sadr was also said to have pledged his support to Palestinian armed groups in Gaza, the Euronews added.[509][510] Palestinian flags were waved by the protesters, as they were shouting anti-Israel slogans and condemning Israel and America.[511]

25 May: One protester was killed and dozens were injured when police attacked protesters gathered at Baghdad's Tahrir Square in the evening, where hundreds marched to demand the end of targeted killings of prominent journalists and activists. Five policemen were also reported to have been among those who were injured when protesters hurled stones at the security forces.[512][513] Among the protesters who gathered at the Tahrir's Square, several of them came from across southern Iraqi cities where several deaths had been recorded.[514] Tear gas and live ammunition were said to have been used by the Iraqi security forces, in an attempt to disperse the gathering of protesters.[515]

26 May: Iraqi security forces arrested the head of the Al-Anbar faction of the Popular Mobilization Forces, Qasim Muslih, for his role in the killing of two civil activists, including Al-Wazni's. Musleh has also been linked with attacks on bases hosting coalition forces, Al-Monitor added.[516][517] However, a government source revealed that a military and security committee has been established to carry out the investigation into the case.[518] The Iraqi PM Al-Kadhimi was also reported to have held a meeting with top Shiite political leaders, prior to ordering the formation of an investigative committee.[519] A report by Human Rights Watch has suggested that there's a possibility of Iraqis being unable to vote in the upcoming 2021 elections, due to the ongoing impunity.[520]

Meanwhile, as a show of force, unknown gunmen were said to have driven vehicles around Baghdad's fortified Green Zone, following the arrest of Qasim Muslih. As a security measure to protect the government and diplomatic missions, the elite Counter-Terrorism Service, including Iraqi security forces were deployed to the Green Zone.[521][522]

27 May: The US has expressed its anger over the use of force that was applied against peaceful protesters who were demanding reforms.[523] They also encouraged the Iraqi government to bring the perpetrators behind the attacks against peaceful demonstrators to justice, the US State Department spokesman stated.[524]

30 May: The United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) disclosed that over 1,000 cases concerning the use of force against protesters in Iraq were closed, mostly as a result of threats issued to the families of the victims.[525]

June

2 June: The threats by the Iran-aligned armed militias against the fortified Green Zone were condemned by the UK, the foreign minister of UK Dominic Raab revealed in a tweet.[526]

6 June: Iraq's air defenses managed to intercept and shot down two drones at the Ain al-Asad air base housing US troops, the Iraqi military disclosed. In order to bring down the drones, the US military's C-RAM defense system which is situated in western Iraq had to be launched, Al-Jazeera added.[527][528] There wasn't any immediate claim of responsibility by armed groups regarding the attack, despite that Iran-backed groups have claimed responsibility in the past for similar attacks.[529]

Separately, hours prior to the shooting down of the two drones that targeted Ain al-Assad base, a rocket that was fired over Baghdad's airport was also said to have been shot down.[530] There were no casualties or damages recorded, the U.S.-led military coalition's spokesperson in Iraq revealed.[531]

9 June: Two Iraqi military bases housing US-led coalition troops, including foreign contractors, came under multiple rocket attacks.[532] The Balad airbase was said to have been targeted by three rockets, although there were no damages or casualties recorded.[533]

Just a few hours following the attack on the Balad airbase, at least one missile also hit near a military base that is next to the Baghdad International Airport.[534] An anonymous security source claimed that five rockets were launched from the nearby Khalis District along the banks of the Tigris River, according to Kurdistan 24.[535] However, no immediate claim of responsibility for both attacks was made.[536]

Separately, Iran-backed militia commander Qassem Musleh was released after being arrested for two weeks on terrorism allegations and violations against protesters.[537] Musleh was released by the judiciary, as there wasn't enough evidence to implicate him on the terrorism charges. His release was also said to have followed the arrival of Iranian Gen. Esmail Ghaani, head of the expeditionary Quds Force in Baghdad.[538][539] Musleh received a warm welcome from his supporters at Baghdad's Jadriya Bridge upon his release, as they snapped pictures and rejoiced together.[540]

July

2 July: With the temperature reaching more than 50 degrees across some parts of Iraq amid deteriorating power and water cuts, several Iraqi protesters reportedly took to the streets of Baghdad.[541] Particularly the southern provinces of Iraq and most of Baghdad were said to have faced more of the effects of the power cuts.[542] Local media reports blamed Friday's power cut on the failure of a major power line, BBC added.[543] In the city of Kut, the protesters gathered outside the closed gates of an electricity substation, to condemn the power cuts that have left them with only several hours of electricity in a day.[544]

Also on Friday, a statement from the office of the Iraqi PM Mustafa al-Kadhimi revealed that the director of Iraq's national electricity company had been fired and that the PM has reassured the restoration of electricity.[545]

8 July: Widespread protests over power cuts have continued across Iraq, including Basra whose temperature has exceeded 50 degrees. The protesters maintained that the power outages were a result of rampant corruption, as well as the inadequacy of infrastructure.[546][547]

Meanwhile, three rockets targeted the US embassy in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, despite earlier attacks on bases housing US troops.[548] According to the Iraqi military, the US embassy was not hit during the attack, but three places close to the Green Zone were hit. The embassy's defense system, managed to divert one of the rockets that were fired, according to Reuters. One of the rockets landed on the outskirts of a residential area, one was close to the headquarters of the National Security Agency, and the other was at a public square.[549][550][551]

16 July: The Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi, revealed that arrests have been made, regarding the killing of renowned analyst Hisham al-Hashimi in early July 2020.[552] One of the suspects who were arrested, Ahmed al-Kenani, was said to have been connected with Kata'ib Hezbollah, which Hashimi criticized in the past, according to a security source.[553]

18 July: Several Iraqi protesters took to the streets of Baghdad, calling for justice, over the killings of activists, since the beginning of the anti-government protest movement in 2019.[554] Protests were also said to have been held in southern Iraq's Nasiriyah.[555]

24 July: Just a day after the son of a renowned Iraqi activist went missing, he was reportedly found shot dead in the southern Iraqi city of Basra.[556] 26-year-old Ali Karim, son of Basra activist Fatima al-Bahadly was said to have been abducted on 23 July, by unknown assailants.[557] According to a medical source, Karim was shot twice, once in the head and the other in his chest.[558] Haider al-Abadi, former Iraqi PM criticized the incessant killing of activists, as he mourned the death of Fatima al-Bahadly's son.[559]

November

Hundreds were injured and two people were killed in violent clashes in Baghdad after the parliamentary elections. These protests had demanded the election results be recounted after alleging election fraud.[560]

See also

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2019, 2021, iraqi, protests, were, series, demonstrations, marches, civil, disobedience, iraq, started, october, 2019, date, which, civil, activists, social, media, spreading, mainly, over, central, southern, provinces, iraq, protest, corruption, unemployment,. The 2019 2021 Iraqi protests were a series of demonstrations marches sit ins and civil disobedience in Iraq It started on 1 October 2019 a date which was set by civil activists on social media spreading mainly over the central and southern provinces of Iraq to protest corruption unemployment political sectarianism inefficient public services and interventionism The protest then escalated into calls to overthrow the Iraqi government The government with the help of Iranian backed militias used live bullets marksmen hot water hot pepper gas and tear gas against protesters leading to many deaths and injuries 10 11 12 13 2019 2021 Iraqi protestsPart of the 2018 2022 Arab protests 2019 2021 Persian Gulf crisisProtest in Baghdad in November 2019Date1 October 2019 2019 10 01 24 July 2021 Occasional protests until 5 November 2021 LocationIraqCaused byRise of Iraqi nationalism State corruption Sectarianism Interventionism 1 2 3 4 Unemployment Low wages Poor public servicesGoalsSecularism 5 6 End of foreign intervention in Iraqi affairs 7 Improved government services Improved standard of livingMethodsDemonstrations Strike action Internet activism Sit ins Civil resistance BarricadesResulted inResignation of Prime Minister Adil Abdul Mahdi Mustafa Al Kadhimi appointed as Prime Minister Elections brought forward to 2021 Council of Representatives passes a new election lawParties to the civil conflictIraqi protestersSupported by Iraqi Communist Party Iraqi Government Iraqi PolicePopular Mobilization Forces Kata ib Hezbollah Badr Organization Asa ib Ahl al Haq Hezbollah al Nujaba Kata ib al Imam Ali Hezbollah Movement in Iraq Team Media WarIslamic Dawa Party Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq Sadrist Movement from 24 January 2020 Peace CompaniesLead figuresNo centralized leadership Barham Salih President of Iraq Mohammed Al Halbousi Speaker of the Iraqi Parliament Adil Abdul Mahdi Former Prime Minister of Iraq Juma Inad Minister of Defence Najah al Shammari Former Minister of Defence Falih Al Fayyadh Advisor of the National Security Council Mohanad Najim Aleqabi Director General of Team Media War Nouri al Maliki Head of Islamic Dawa Party Humam Hamoudi Head of Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq Muqtada al Sadr Head of the Sadrist Movement Abu Mahdi Al Muhandis Deputy Chairman of the PMF Abu Zainab Al Lami 8 Security Director of the PMF Hadi Al Amiri Commander of the Badr Organization Qais Al Khazali Commander of Asa ib Ahl al Haq CasualtiesDeath s 600 1 100Injuries25 000 30 000Arrested4 600Casualties data 13 January 2020 per Iraqi Warcrimes Documentation Center 9 The protesters called for the end of the sectarian political system which was created by the United States and allies after the US led invasion in 2003 and has been marked by sectarian divides mainly between Shias and Sunnis as well as other sects by religious figures and politicians 14 15 16 The protests which were the largest of their kind in Iraq since the 2003 invasion gave rise to the October Protest Movement 17 Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude 2 1 Holders of higher degrees demonstrations 2 2 Dismissal of Abdel Wahab Al Saedi 3 Causes goals and methods 3 1 Assassination and intimidation campaign 3 2 Attack on the US Embassy in Baghdad 4 Timeline 2019 4 1 October 4 2 November 4 3 December 5 Timeline 2020 5 1 January 5 2 February 5 3 March 5 4 April 5 5 May 5 6 June 5 7 July 5 8 August 5 9 September 5 10 October 5 11 November 5 12 December 6 Timeline 2021 6 1 January 6 2 February 6 3 March 6 4 April 6 5 May 6 6 June 6 7 July 6 8 November 7 See also 8 ReferencesBackground EditSee also Investment in post invasion Iraq Corruption 2011 Iraqi protests 2012 13 Iraqi protests 2015 2018 Iraqi protests and Irreligion in Iraq In 2011 protests broke out in various provinces within Iraq demanding the end of corruption nepotism and unemployment while also calling for increased wages and improved public services such as electricity transportation health care education and municipal services 18 19 20 Protestors faced government suppression police brutality and arrests 21 These reform demands in the six Sunni dominant provinces escalated during the 2012 2013 Iraqi protests after Nouri Al Maliki s acts of persecution against Sunni political figures 22 23 This in turn led to protests calling for the overthrow of the sectarian government and redrafting the constitution as well as a march into Baghdad to occupy the Green Zone 23 These protests were faced with even more government suppression leading to clashes between security forces and local tribesmen who had alleged support from Ba ath Party loyalists 24 25 After reports of the Sunni factions which were part of the Iraqi insurgency against the American occupation unifying their powers and taking control over Al Anbar Governorate the government launched the 2013 Anbar campaign 26 By July 2014 these factions which merged with ISIL had occupied most of Al Anbar Ninawa Salah ad Din Kirkuk and Diyala which ignited the War in Iraq 2013 2017 The U S Secretary of State pledged intense support to the Iraqi government while imploring the Government to rise above sectarian motivations but according to senior officials in the Department of Defense the U S was refraining from giving weapons to the Iraqi military because of lack of confidence in Iraqi troops while veteran U S journalists familiar with the situation claimed that Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al Maliki is not the answer and should step down 27 28 Fueled by the lack of progress of Haider al Abadi s government and state corruption the leader of the Sadrist Movement Muqtada al Sadr called for a sit in within the Green Zone in Baghdad to force the government to find serious solutions for corruption 29 On 30 April 2016 thousands of Al Sadr s followers breached the barricades of the Green Zone and stormed into governmental buildings including the Iraqi parliament 30 chasing representatives out of the Green Zone before retreating the day after by the call of Al Sadr 31 Another demonstration broke out in Basra and nearby cities in July 2018 due to deteriorating public utilities water contamination and lack of electricity and continued for a few months 32 33 Protestors burned down a number of government buildings and parties headquarters blocked numerous main streets tore and burned pictures of Khomeini and Khamenei and even occupied the Al Najaf and Basra International Airports 34 35 They were faced with live bullets from security forces causing the death of at least 16 protestors 36 37 35 Remembering the rise of ISIS during the protests in 2012 38 these ones avoided sectarian rhetoric 39 Initially Americans had not seemed to be the focus of the anger although a 2019 poll found that only 22 of Iraqis had a favorable opinion of the United States while 16 had a favorable opinion of Iran 38 Prelude EditOn 20 June in Basra demonstrators gathered outside the city s new administrative headquarters to vent their anger about poor basic services and unemployment The old headquarters were burnt down during 2018 s months long protest Basra and the surrounding region produce about 90 percent of the country s oil wealth but most of its residents have not benefited from it Protesters blamed Basra s authorities for the city s problems from a lack of job opportunities to unreliable and poor public utilities Riot police were deployed at the scene but the protest remained peaceful 40 Holders of higher degrees demonstrations Edit On 25 September 2019 a group of holders of higher degrees organized a protest in front of the Prime Minister s office in Baghdad demanding their employment 41 The protest was faced with major suppression from security forces as armoured vehicles separated the demonstrators using hot water and police forces conducted random arrests among them which led to cases of fainting and injuries among the demonstrators 42 This incident was faced with country wide anger because of the forceful methods that were used by the government towards intellectual demonstrators along with the violence that was used against female protestors 42 43 Reactions included the Ministry of Interior forming a committee to investigate the incident and demonstrators organizing solidarity protests in many provinces to condemn these methods 42 44 The holders of higher degrees resumed their protests for three days after the incident spreading over many southern provinces 45 46 Dismissal of Abdel Wahab Al Saedi Edit On 27 September 2019 Iraqi Prime Minister Adil Abdul Mahdi issued a decision to transfer the commander of the Iraqi Counter Terrorism Force Lieutenant General Abdel Wahab Al Saedi from the ICTF to the Ministry of Defence Al Saedi said the decision was an insult to his military rank and that he would rather go to jail than execute this decision 47 This decision caused political figures including former prime minister Haider Al Abadi and many representatives to criticize Abdul Mahdi and call for him to back down from his decisions 48 49 According to VOA News Al Saedi s transfer was influenced individually by pro Iran factions within the Al Shaabi paramilitary force said a government official in Iraq who asked to be kept unknown 50 After the decision was made social media was flooded with Al Saedi s photos and achievements calling for Abdul Mahdi to back down from this injustice and accusing Iran of ordering the Iraqi government to replace every national hero in the army with Iranian loyalists 51 52 In response to this backlash Abdul Mahdi said he stands by his decision and that it is a normal routine decision with no political motivations 53 Furthermore after calls for the unveiling of a statue of Al Saedi in Mosul that was made to immortalize the commander s efforts in the city s liberation security forces surrounded the statue prohibiting its unveiling before it was finally removed by them 54 55 On 30 September 2019 Al Saedi announced that he executed Abdul Mahdi s orders and joined the ministry of defence as a loyal soldier to serve my country and my beloved people 56 Causes goals and methods EditStarting on 25 October 2019 mass protests took place in many cities in Iraq against corruption and a national government that protestors saw as unaccountable for its actions After the U S occupation 2003 11 oligarchs and warlords were perceived to have taken control over Iraq While the country produces more oil than the United Arab Emirates the oil revenues were seen by protestors as failing to be spent on maintenance of hospitals and roads A widely used slogan in this phase of the protests was We want a homeland reflecting a longing both for a sense of unity and for a self determined life in dignity 57 While at daytime protesters from all strata of Iraqi society peacefully took to the streets and squares of cities like Kerbala later at night youths from the suburbs sought violent confrontations using molotov cocktails and burning car tires which was answered by the state security forces with tear gas rubber bullets deadly snipers and even patrol vehicles lethally ramming into crowds 57 Assassination and intimidation campaign Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Casualty recording Violence against academics in post invasion Iraq and 2019 20 Iranian protests Deaths and casualties Hassan Wahab of the Amal Association human rights group said Those protestors detained and released are only released on bail Charges are not dropped so they face re arrest and trial 58 As of 23 December 2019 there were 29 assassinated activists related to the protests most of them were in Baghdad 59 On 10 January 2020 an Iraqi journalist Ahmad Abdelsamad of Dijlah TV and his cameraman Safaa Ghali were shot in their car by unidentified gunmen 60 61 62 On 21 January the police stated that Janat Madhi a 49 year old activist was gunned down by unknown gunmen as she came back home from protests in the southern city of Basra according to the Urdu Point 63 On 14 August an activist Tahseen Osama Al Shahmani was shot 20 times at his internet service company in Basra 64 On 19 August a female activist Reham Yacoub was killed and three others were wounded in the city of Basra when unidentified gunmen opened fire on their car 65 66 67 Attack on the US Embassy in Baghdad Edit Main article Attack on the United States embassy in Baghdad The US Embassy in Baghdad was attacked on the last day of 2019 The attack was organized and directed by Iran s proxy leaders Abu Mahdi al Muhandis Qais al Khazali Hadi al Amari and Falih al Fayyadh They are seen in the pictures taken on the scene 68 Abu Mahdi al Muhandis one of the leaders of the attack on the US Embassy in Baghdad was condemned and spent years in jail in Kuwait for directing the December 1983 attacks on the US and French embassies there 69 70 For a long time Iraqi anti government protestors tried to enter Green Zone and were brutally suppressed and held back On 31 December groups of Popular Mobilization Forces al Hashd al Sha abi entered the Green Zone and went directly toward the American Embassy without being blocked by security forces 71 US president Donald Trump accused Iran of orchestrating the attack on the embassy and added that they would be held fully responsible 72 In the aftermath the commander of Iran s Quds Force Major General Qasem Soleimani and Abu Mahdi al Muhandis were assassinated in a U S drone strike while traveling in a convoy near Baghdad International Airport 73 On 5 January in reaction to these airstrikes the Iraqi parliament called for the expulsion of US troops from the country 74 Timeline 2019 Edit The image shows crowds of people in Tahrir Square from the top of the building where the restaurant is located on November 1 2019 October Edit Protesters in Baghdad on 1 October 1 October Protests erupted in Baghdad in Liberation Square over high unemployment poor basic services and state corruption These protests spread to the southern provinces The authorities imposed an internet blackout and shut down 75 of the country s internet access 75 Protesters demanded the resignation of Adil Abdul Mahdi and prepare for early elections 76 The protesters also began demonstrating against Iranian influence and against the leader of Quds Force Qasem Soleimani 77 At the beginning of the protests the demonstrators were mostly young male holding the government responsible for its many failures according to vox 78 The Iraqi prime minister declared a curfew until further notice 79 3 October According to Amnesty International 18 civilians and one police officer were killed and hundreds were injured after three days of protesting 80 4 October In Nasiriyah many headquarters of political parties were burned down 81 5 October Unknown forces raided many TV channels such as Al Arabiya Dijlah TV NRT and Al Rasheed TV for airing the protests The forces destroyed these channels properties 82 7 October Dozens of protesters were killed and hundreds were injured in Sadr City 83 8 October Protests largely ceased due to Arba een 84 a Shia religious holiday which occurred on 19 October According to Arab News regardless of warnings from the Iranian authorities for the pilgrims to procrastinate going on the pilgrimage to Iraq 3 5 million Shiites mainly Iranians entered Iraq through land borders on Friday 85 24 October Thousands of protesters began to congregate at Liberation Square in Baghdad protesting against the government and against the Iranian influence Nearly 50 protesters were killed and injured after attempting to enter the Green Zone 86 25 October Protesting in Maysan Governorate began to turn into riots between Peace Companies led by Muqtada al Sadr on one side and Asa ib Ahl al Haq and Badr Organization on another 87 Asa ib Ahl al Haq member Wisam Alyawi and his brother both PMU commanders for the Maysan Governorate were lynched by angry protesters who dragged them out of an ambulance and beat them to death Qais Khazali chief of all Asa ib Ahl al Haq announced that nine PMU members had been killed in the recent protests blamed Israel for their deaths and stated he would take revenge four times over 88 Protesters burned down and destroyed many offices of political parties in the city of Samawah 89 Protesters in Karbala chanted against Iran tearing up Ali Khamenei s pictures They also attacked the Governorate Council building 90 They also burnt the Iranian consulate 91 In Al Qadisiyyah Governorate protesters burned down the Governorate Council building Administrative authorities declared a curfew in the province 92 In the city of Al Kut protesters attacked many of the political parties offices and also attacked the house of former Minister of Interior Qasim al Araji 93 26 October 7 protesters were killed and 28 wounded after conflicts between Badr Organization and protesters in city of Hillah in Babil Governorate 94 The seven protesters died when members of the Badr organization opened fire at protesters assembled in front of their office according to The Guardian 95 28 October A top security authority for Baghdad declared an open ended curfew on the capital four days after the renewed protests against government killed more than 70 protesters 96 In Karbala 14 30 people were killed in protests Government officials denied any deaths occurred 91 30 October Iranian military officer Qasem Soleimani met with Hadi al Amiri one of Abdul Mahdi s political opponents and asked him to support Abdul Mahdi 97 31 October President Barham Salih said in a televised address that the Prime Minister had agreed to resign on the condition that a successor is agreed to replace him 98 November Edit 2 November Protesters blocked Iraq s main port Umm Qasr Oil exports from offshore platforms were not affected but imports of staple food were Iraq is heavily dependent on food import 99 3 November Protestors stormed the Iranian consulate in Karbala where they set fires around the building and replaced the Iranian flag with an Iraqi one 100 According to Reuters 3 protesters were killed when Iraqi security forces fired live ammunition at protesters gathered outside the Iranian consulate 101 However the BBC was led to believe that the source of the gunfire was anonymous and it was aimed at both the security forces and protesters 102 4 November An internet blockage observatory NetBlocks highlighted that the internet access in Baghdad and five other regions in Iraq were cut off on 4 November in wake of the continued rage in the country 103 Netblocks added that the new internet shut down is currently perceived to be the most extreme shut down experienced in Iraq 104 Iraqi authorities had taken a similar move in October where social media and messaging remained highly restricted in several parts of the country 105 8 November Grand Ayatollah Ali al Sistani Iraq s most influential Shia cleric called on the government to meet the demands of the protesters and urged the security forces to avoid the use of violence 106 10 November The Iraqi Parliamentary Human Rights Committee reported that at least 319 people had been killed during the protests According to the Independent High Commission for Human Rights of Iraq an additional 15 000 were injured 107 13 November The Iraqi Parliament held a special session to discuss the crisis Jeanine Hennis Plasschaert of the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq addressed the session to present her plan to resolve the crisis which involves election reform and anti corruption measures 108 14 November Four people were killed and 62 injured in Baghdad in clashes between security forces and protesters 109 16 November At least four protesters were killed and nearly 20 were injured as a car bomb attack took place at the Tahrir Square in Baghdad No group claimed responsibility of the first explosion in the ongoing anti government protests 110 17 November Documents leaked by The Intercept 111 revealed details of Iranian influence inside Iraq 112 The Intercept was said to have received the documents from an unknown source and has since been unable to identify according to the guardian 113 19 November Protesters blocked the entrance to the country s second largest commercial port Khor al Zubair port halting the trade activity for oil and other tankers Prior to that the access to Umm Qasr Port was also cut off 114 21 November Al Jazeera reported that at least seven protesters were killed and 78 wounded by security forces in Baghdad 115 24 November At least two protesters were shot dead in the southern city of Nasiriyah as they shut down schools and blocked the Zaitoun and the Nasr bridges into the city center Nearly 47 people were also wounded during the clashes with security forces 116 27 November Protestors attacked the Iranian consulate in Najaf for the second time this time burning it down 117 Security forces fired tear gas into the crowd and injured some of them but had to escape when hundreds of protesters poured into the consulate and set it on fire 118 29 November 44 protestors were killed in southern Iraq 119 The prime minister announced his pending resignation on the same day 120 December Edit Protesters occupy the unfinished Turkish restaurant building in Baghdad 1 December Despite the resignation of Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi demonstrators in the Shi ite populated city of Najaf set fire to the Iranian consulate for the second time in a week 121 According to the BBC reports showed that staff at the Iranian consulate were able to escape immediately before the demonstrators stormed the consulate 122 A police official said that when the police fired shots with live ammunition in order to stop the protesters from breaking into the consulate one protester was killed and a minimum of 35 people were injured according to Al Jazeera 123 6 December Unidentified gunmen in vehicles opened fire on protesters in Baghdad s Khilani Square killing 25 including three police officers and injuring around 130 others 124 The attacks were said to have followed a day after a string of suspicious stabbings in Baghdad s Tahrir Square leaving at least 15 wounded according to the guardian 125 126 According to Aljazeera some protesters blamed the Iraqi government of conspiring with the gunmen indicating to a power outage that coincided with the time of the attacks 127 8 December An Iraqi civil activist Fahim al Ta i was assassinated by unknown gunmen on motorcycle outside al Ansar Hotel in the Baroudi area of Karbala 128 12 December A 16 year old boy falsely accused of shooting protestors was dragged along the ground and lynched by protestors after security forces withdrew The boy s deceased body was de clothed apart from his underpants and was later hung from a traffic light It was later removed by his family and taken to a forensic morgue 129 Muqtada al Sadr s group stated that it would withdraw its blue helmets support for the protests unless the terrorists responsible for the lynching were identified 129 A protestor s group described the lynching as a Machiavellian plan aimed at tarnishing the reputation of the peaceful protesters and that the protestors had nothing to do with the lynching event 129 24 December The Council of Representatives passed a series of electoral laws to placate protestors The laws transitioned elections to a single non transferable vote system which allowed voters to select individuals rather than use party lists while the candidates would represent electoral districts rather than provinces 130 The new electoral law is expected to have representatives represent more local voices as opposed to the entire governorate they were previously elected from as well as stop infighting amongst list members and a myriad of small lists from siphoning off votes and failing to meet the electoral threshold It would also prevent parties from running on unified lists which had previously led some to easily sweep all the seats in a particular governorate However minority groups might end up being less represented as they now have to obtain a plurality in the district they are running in and the number of seats might not accurately reflect overall popular support The Washington Institute for Near East Policy had previously endorsed this approach 131 although the Al Bayan Center for Planning and Studies an independent non profit think tank in Baghdad had proposed instead retaining the proportional system but creating more districts so that each elected between three and eight seats each which would retain the proportional aspect of seat allocation while binding representatives to more local areas 132 Most Kurdish legislators boycotted the meeting of the council in opposition to changing the law 133 After its passage legal experts intellectuals and some protestors suggested that the law as written might not work as intended as there has not been a census to count population for the purpose of drawing districts in over two decades and the parties might end up running candidates individually but then re form parliamentary groups once the Council sits effectively returning to the status quo 134 The new law apportions for the legislature to be shrunk to 251 seats down from 329 says that the districts that are to be created must consist of over 100 000 people and reduced the age of eligibility for candidacy to 25 from 30 One quarter of seats would be reserved for women and 9 would be reserved for national religious minorities The law also established the Independent High Electoral Commission which is to be composed of nine members seven of whom would be judges from regular courts In addition there are two other judges from the State Council administrative court 26 December President Barham Salih submits a letter of resignation after refusing to appoint Asaad Al Eidani as Prime Minister following the resignation of Adil Abdul Mahdi Salih stated that Al Eridani would not be approved by the demonstrators 135 136 President Salih added that since the constitution voids him of the right to refuse a nomination he prefers to step down instead of accepting the nomination of a new prime minister that the protesters would reject 137 29 December The US bombarded Kata ib Hezbollah positions in Iraq killing 25 members of those Kataib forces and injuring 51 others 138 31 December Hundreds of anti American protesters surrounded the US embassy in Baghdad in the Green Zone of the city where embassies and government buildings are concentrated in protest over the US airstrikes in Iraq two days earlier Protesters elsewhere in Baghdad s Tahrir Square stated demonstrations at the US embassy are a natural response to the US strikes over Hashd positions in Iraq However they condemned the attack on the U S embassy by Iraqi supporters of the Hashd group saying we are staying here in the hub of the peaceful protest movement and added that the crowds in the Green Zone do not represent us We want peaceful change Rumors speculated that on that day some protesters had broken into the US embassy compound 138 However sometime later the US ministry of foreign affairs announced that protesters had not entered the actual embassy building in Baghdad and that the US ambassador was still at his post 139 Timeline 2020 EditJanuary Edit 4 January A funeral procession for Abu Mahdi al Muhandis and Soleimani was held in Baghdad with thousands of mourners in attendance waving Iraqi and PMF flags 140 and chanting No to America 141 The procession started at the Al Kadhimiya Mosque in Baghdad Iraq s prime minister Adil Abdul Mahdi and leaders of the PMF attended the funeral procession 142 They were taken to the holy Shia cities of Najaf 143 and Karbala were held funeral prayers on them 144 5 January Following the 3 January assassination by the United States US of Iranian major general Qasem Soleimani and of the head of the Popular Mobilization Forces PMF Abu Mahdi al Muhandis protests continued in Nassiriyah Dewaniya Kut Amarah Karbala and Baghdad with a deliberate shift to protesting against both the Iranian and US roles in Iraq Earlier protests tended to mostly oppose Iranian influence in Iraq The earlier slogan Out out Iran was replaced by No to Iran no to America 145 Protestors in Basra and Nassiriyah blocked symbolic funeral processions for Soleimani and al Muhandis In Nasiriyah protesters clashed with a funeral procession in honour of Abu Mahdi al Muhandis The local headquarters of the PMF was set alight 146 and protestors in Najaf burnt tyres and blocked main roads to protest against Iran 146 In reaction to the airstrikes the Iraqi parliament called for the expulsion of US troops from the country 74 7 January After holding funeral processions across Iran Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei held funeral prayers among hundreds of thousands of people and crying in front of the Iraqi flag draped coffin for the deceased 147 148 Abu Mahdi al Muhandis body was returned to Iraq and transferred to his hometown of Basra 149 His burial was delayed because of the huge crowd at the funeral 144 On 8 January Al Muhandis was buried in Iraq s Najaf where hundreds of mourners gathered to pay their final respects Funeral processions were also held in several Iraqi cities prior to Najaf including Baghdad and Karbala 150 12 January Hundreds of Iraqis in Basra mourned the death of the correspondent for local television station al Dijla Ahmad Abdessamad and his cameraman Safaa Ghali 151 A mourner stated that the attack was obviously an attempt to keep people silent France 24 reported 152 Iraq s Ministry of Interior invited journalists to a conference in Basra in order to discuss the killings as well as the security conditions of the city However the ministry was left with no choice but to cancel the conference because journalists refused to attend 153 17 January At least two people were killed and dozens injured after the security forces fire upon protesters at Sinak bridge in central Baghdad 154 In the southern city of Najaf Iraqi protesters attacked the Kata ib Hezbollah militia s center and set it afire Next day protestors continued by burning posters of Qassem Soleimani 155 20 January Four protesters and two police officers were killed in fresh clashes in Baghdad Medical sources disclosed that over 50 people were injured according to Arab News 156 157 Iraqi security forces reportedly fired tear gas and threw stun grenades in response to the petrol bombs thrown at them by protesters in Baghdad s Tayaran Square 158 In the southern parts of Iraq however hundreds of protesters in Karbala Amara and Nasiriyah shut down major roads and burned tyres The protesters maintained that Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi has failed in nominating a new government that would be welcomed by Iraqis among several other promises 159 160 On 21 January Iraqi police confirmed that three Katyusha rockets landed inside the fortified Green Zone housing government buildings and foreign delegations in Baghdad according to the guardian 161 No group has claimed responsibility for the attack although Iranian backed militias have been accused by the US of carrying out similar attacks on the Green Zone over the past few months 162 22 January Iraq s High Commission for Human Rights announced that at least 10 people have been killed in the violent unrest across the country within the last two days Al Jazeera reported 163 Iraq s President Barham Salih attended a meeting with US President Donald Trump at Davos 22 January where they discussed the strategic foreign relations between Iraq and the US which was perceived by Iran backed militias as a clear indication that Salih wants the US military to remain in Iraq despite warning him not to meet with Trump 164 23 January Amnesty International warned that Iraqi security forces have continued their series of operations involving the use of deadly violence against peaceful protesters based on substantiating video analysis and eyewitness reports confirmed by the organization 165 According to the San Diego Union Tribune at least 8 people were believed to have been wounded when security forces used tear gas to disperse protesters on the Mohammed al Qassim Highway 166 24 January Shia leader Muqtada al Sadr alongside Pro PMF leaders call for a million man march was answered as hundreds of thousands of Iraqis marched to the streets demanding the withdrawal of US troops from Iraq 167 168 The Green zone which houses the US embassy alongside the path of the march was heavily surrounded by security forces CNN added 169 According to the BBC among those protesting in the city of Baghdad are Iranian backed militias with many others carrying Iraq s national flags and placards criticizing the presence of US troops in the country 170 171 According to the Guardian a statement by the influential Shia cleric Moqtada al Sadr was read out by his representative on the stage at the place of the protest calling for the closure of Iraqi airspace to US military and surveillance aircraft the annulment of Iraqi s security agreement with the US as well as the departure of all foreign forces from the country and so on 172 A rough estimate suggested that the turnout of the protesters had reached 2 5 million 173 25 January Iraqi security forces raided a protest site in Baghdad and tried to remove protesters in southern cities firing tear gas and live bullets killing four and wounding dozens more The raid came after Muqtada al Sadr ordered his followers to withdraw 174 It was reported that al Sadr s followers packed up their tents and departed the camps after the withdrawal of his support 175 The withdrawal of Iraq s Sadrists in their support for the anti government protest movement has left many pondering as to whether a government crackdown will follow 176 26 January In Baghdad rockets hit the United States embassy wounding at least one One rocket was said to hit the embassy cafeteria while two other rockets landed nearby a security source was cited as saying by the AFP news agency 177 178 According to CNN the wounded individual sustained a minor injury and had already resumed duty a US official added 179 The Independent High Commission for Human Rights of Iraq stated that over the last three days 9 protesters were killed in Baghdad and 3 others in Nasiriyah in the Iraqi protests leaving 230 others wounded 180 27 January In the city of Nasiriyah south of Iraq security forces opened fire at a crowd of anti government protesters and killed one person 181 182 US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called on Iraqi PM Abdul Mahdi to uphold Iraq s sovereignty in light of attacks from Iran on US facilities in Iraq including the rocket attacks against the US embassy in Baghdad the day before 183 31 January the Human Rights Watch urged the Iraqi authorities to investigate unlawful use of force and all killings at the hands of security forces with the aid of international experts if need be 184 On Friday security forces fired tear gas to disperse the crowd at Baghdad s Khilani and Wathba squares leaving at least 11 protesters injured medical and security officials stated 185 February Edit 1 February Iraq s President Barham Salih appointed a former Minister of Communications Mohammed Tawfiq Allawi as the country s new Prime Minister 186 However anti government protesters promptly rejected the appointment of Mohammed Allawi as the new prime minister designate by holding rallies in Baghdad as well as in cities across the country s southern provinces 187 Later in the evening in an address to Iraqis on state television Allawi pledged to form a representative government hold early parliamentary elections ensure justice for the unlawful acts against protesters among all other claims by the protesters 188 2 February Protesters who were against Allawi s nomination started grouping their tents together away from the tents occupied by Sadrists in Baghdad s Tahir square 189 3 February Al Jazeera reported that since the onset of the protests the death toll is now believed to have reached 536 alongside 13 members of the security forces as announced by the Iraqi state television 190 Sadrists who were identified wearing blue hats stormed an anti regime rally which led to the demise of a protester who was stabbed to death leaving three others injured security and medical sources stated 191 4 February A day after a demonstrator was killed tensions between Sadr supporters and protesters against Allawi s nomination increased as the rift erupted into a fistfight between the two opposing groups in the southern city of Diwaniyah 192 According to Arab News despite the interference of security forces the young anti regime protesters chanted against Sadr Iraqi authorities including Iran which they blamed for supporting the government s harsh actions towards protesters 193 Furthermore in order to ensure schools were fully reopened in Diwaniyah after sit ins had forced them to shut down security forces were sighted outside the schools as well as government offices 194 5 February Violence erupted in the holy city of Najaf as al Sadr s followers tried to forcibly remove demonstrators from their protest camps 195 Medical sources stated that at least 8 people were killed during the clash leaving at least 20 more injured according to Reuters News Agency 196 Out of the 8 protesters who were killed 7 of them were believed to have died as a result of bullets to either the chest or head France 24 added 197 The number of injured people had reached 52 according to The New York Times 198 Mohammed Allawi Iraq s PM designate held a meeting with several representatives of the protest movement from the various provinces across the country 199 Similar clashes involving al Sadr s followers attempting to suppress the protests were reported to have taken place across other parts of the country as well including Karbala Diwaniyah Dhi Qar Baghdad among others according to the Kurdistan 24 200 6 February Following the violence that erupted the day before between anti government protesters and followers of Moqtada al Sadr hundreds of anti government protesters returned to the site of the violence as they rallied through the streets of the holy city of Najaf in an attempt to rebuild their protest camp that was destroyed 201 In the evening U S Secretary of State Mike Pompeo issued a statement condemning the killing of anti government protesters in the city of Najaf and called on the Iraqi government to see to the need of protesters as well as punish those responsible for the killings 202 7 February With Ayatollah Ali al Sistani being one of the most powerful and influential figures in Iraq several protesters and Iraqi activists were clinging on to him as their last beacon of hope as they urged him to call for a million strong march against the Iraqi government ahead of Friday s sermon 203 During the Friday sermon in remarks presented by al Sistani s representative in the holy city of Karbala he denounced the clash with Sadrists in Najaf two days before and held security forces responsible for failing to prevent the death of 8 protesters 204 It was projected by the Iraqi Human Rights Commission on Friday that almost 550 people lost their lives since the beginning of the anti government protests in Iraq which started in October last year 205 Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani further called on Allawi to create a government that will be trusted by the people and represent them as well 206 Following the Friday sermon of influential Shia cleric Ali al Sistani a lot of anti government protesters and activists are feeling hopeful and convinced that the protest movement which started in early October will now regain its momentum Al Jazeera reported 207 The president of the Kurdistan Regional Government Nechirvan Barzani has issued a statement condemning the unlawful use of force against peaceful protesters on Wednesday even though the Kurdish authorities have adopted similar approaches 208 9 February Moqtada Al Sadr suggested in a tweet 18 points which the Iraqi protesters should stick to during protests including the avoidance of free mixing between men and women in protest sites 209 10 February A protester was shot dead near a protest site at the al Ain University in the city of Nasiriyah as Iraqi security forces fired live ammunition to break up a gathering of protesters according to The New York Times 210 The security forces were believed to have started shooting at the protesters when they attempted creating a blockage at the entrance of the university 211 American citizens living in Iraq have been advised by the U S embassy in Iraq to remain vigilant ahead of huge protests that are expected to hold for the next three days in Baghdad as well as Najaf 212 However the Iranian consulate in Iraq that was set ablaze last year by protesters is now functional as Visa operations continue while regular consular services are expected to commence from next week according to Bloomberg The Najaf police have been charged with the responsibility of providing security and protection for the consulate after its reopening Lieutenant Najm Al Saadi added 213 214 11 February Influential Shia cleric Moqtada Al Sadr has dissolved the Blue caps unit which has been accused of violence that led to the death of anti government protesters last week in Najaf and also publicly rejected what is known as the Sadrist movement on Twitter 215 Member of the Iraqi Council of Representatives Sarkawt Shamsulddin speaking at the Atlantic Council on 11 February maintained that the huge protests that have been going on since October last year which ended the previous government presents Mohammed Allawi with the golden chance of bringing about tangible transformation in Iraq 216 12 February Protest sites in Baghdad have been reopened by Iraqi security forces allowing anti government protests continue in al Tahir square only on the condition that protection will be provided by the Iraqi security forces Protesters were seen collaborating with security forces in order to ensure free movement across the Sinak bridge that has been closed down for months 217 13 February Iraqi women have come out in hundreds to criticize the use of force against protesters in Baghdad and the city of Nasiriyah in order to challenge the call made by Moqtada al Sadr against the mixing of men and women in protest sites Male anti government protesters also joined the rally with some of the women seen wearing veils while others had their faces wrapped in black and white scarves 218 219 A usual incident happened on the protest site which involved both men and women setting their camps side by side one another 220 According to the Daily Sabah several protesters carried Iraqi flags and roses marching for over an hour with the men linking their arms around the women to form a circle 221 Later in the evening al Sadr condemned the rally on his Twitter account which he described as a sin and an attempt at compromising the righteousness of Iraq 222 40 days after Iranian general Qassem Soleimani and Iraq s paramilitary leader were killed by US drones hundreds of Iraqis in Baghdad came out to the site to mark 40 days remembrance of their death 223 14 February Haaretz disclosed that Iraqi security forces were preparing in anticipation of a violent clash between the protest movement and followers of al Sadr the next day as two large scale protests were expected to take place 224 15 February A 50 year old Iraqi with German residence tried to set himself ablaze during the Munich Security Conference near Karlsplatz Germany 225 The German police were able to prevent him as the man immersed himself in Petrol and attempted rushing into a gathering with a lighter in his hand The Baghdad Post added 226 16 February Alaa al Rikaby the prominent activist in Nasiriyah was backed to replace the premier designate Mohammed Allawi by Hundreds of protesters who demonstrated on the streets carrying al Rikaby s photo 227 Meanwhile shopkeepers in Al Rasheed Street one of the oldest streets in Baghdad have decried the lack of improvement in trade regardless of the reopening of roads and bridges nearby 228 17 February Based on plausible accusations received by the United Nations envoy to Iraq of peaceful protesters being fired at with hunting rifles firebombs and stones last weekend the Iraqi government has been urged to look into the matter to ensure the protection of peaceful protesters 229 In a statement issued by UNAMI because of similar use of force at least 150 people were wounded in the holy city of Karbala last month 230 Following a meeting between the speaker of the Iraqi parliament Mohammed al Halbusi and a 13 year old protester popularly known as Hamid Daghethoum the speaker pledged his full backing for the demands made by protesters 231 20 February Protesters in the city of Nasiriyah which has been a focal point of the anti government protests in the south were still demanding for one of their own to become the prime minister regardless of the increasing force applied by security forces 232 According to Kurdistan24 a delegation of the Kurdistan Region has accused Allawi of not recognizing the political and legal position of the Kurdistan region after its visit to the capital to hold talks with the Iraqi PM which was abruptly shortened 233 22 February Iraqi protesters decided to move the center of their protests from Baghdad to Nasiriyah in Dhi Qar province with hundreds of protesters arriving from Najaf and more expected from other cities as well 234 23 February New clashes erupted between anti government protesters and security forces at Khilani Square in Baghdad central where one person was killed and at least 6 others injured 235 Live ammunition was fired by Iraqi security forces to break up the crowd that was gathered close to Sinak bridge which was opened again recently by security forces after being closed down by protesters for several months 236 A commendable 24 year old Iraqi Nurse Hannah Jassem was reported to have assisted in stitching up injuries in an open fronted shack at the protest site in Tahrir Square over the weekend 237 Also more than 1 000 students marched through Tahrir Square holding up pictures of victims who they believed were martyred in the demonstrations 236 On the same day US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called Mohammed Allawi to congratulate him on his appointment as the Prime Minister designate according to The Sun Herald During the call both parties assented to the significance of improving the conditions well being and security for the people of Iraq by the government 238 239 25 February Despite reports that five people tested positive for coronavirus as well as heavy rainfall thousands of anti government protesters came out to protest in Baghdad wearing face masks 240 According to the Middle East Monitor the confidence vote for the newly formed cabinet of Prime Minister designate Mohammed Allawi which was planned for the day by the Iraqi parliament was delayed by two days 241 26 February Prime Minister designate Mohammed Allawi disclosed that the Iraqi parliament tomorrow will hold a vote to confirm his new cabinet which he maintained will consist of autonomous ministers 242 27 February Several lawmakers who were not satisfied with Allawi s ministerial list abstained from attending the session which led to the postponement of the session by the Iraqi parliament Prior to the vote Mohammed Allawi reportedly sent a letter to the British embassy requesting the annulment of his British citizenship the National added 243 244 There was anticipation that Iraq s speaker of parliament Mohammed Al Halbousi would bring up the issue of Mohammed Allawi s dual citizenship during the session according to The New Arab 245 An official complaint has been filed with Iraq s attorney by the Iraqi parliament following the accusation made by Muhammed Allawi that lawmakers are collecting bribes in order to thwart his regime 246 March Edit 1 March The Iraqi parliament for the second time this week failed to endorse Mohammed Allawi s new cabinet That left him with no choice but to step down as the Prime Minister designate 247 According to The Jakarta Post Allawi in a letter he sent to President Saleh stating the reason for his resignation he accused some political factions of not having the will of the people at heart and neglecting the importance of the reform He also urged the President to accept his apology for being unable to establish a new cabinet while admitting that he is unfit for the role he has been tasked with 248 249 Following Allawi s proclamation protesters in Tahrir Square showed excitement and joy as they had already disapproved of his nomination and his entire cabinet the BBC added 250 However in accordance with the Iraqi constitution President Barham Salih is expected to propose a new prime minister within the next 15 days 251 The governor of Basra province Asaad al Eidani is said to be one of the many names speculated to replace Mohammed Allawi despite his objection by demonstrators prior to the appointment of Allawi according to The New York Times 252 2 March Early in the morning just hours after Prime Minister Candidate Mohammad Tawfiq Allawi withdrew his nomination for the position two Katyusha rockets reportedly struck the heavily fortified Green Zone in central Baghdad leaving zero casualties according to DW One of the rockets was believed to have landed close to the US embassy Reuters added 253 254 3 March The United Nations envoy for Iraq criticized the Iraqi parliament for failing to reach a quorum which hampers the ability of the government to make decisions hence leading the Iraqi people into an unpredictable future 255 5 March Protesters took to the streets again early in the morning in Basra province blocking vital roads burning tires as well as urging the immediate appointment of an independent to create a new government 256 8 March A clash erupted between Iraqi security forces and protesters which left 16 protesters injured when the security forces fired tear gas at the protesters in Baghdad s Al Khilani Square according to the MEM 257 10 March In Maysan province of Southern Iraq unknown gunmen killed two anti government activists Abdel Aaddous Qasim and Karrar Adil according to a security source in Iraq 258 Shia armed groups linked with Iran have been blamed by some activists of being responsible for the attack but the groups have falsified these claims 259 17 March Former governor of the holy city of Najaf Adnan al Zurfi was appointed by President Barham Salih to succeed Mohammed Allawi as the new prime minister designate of Iraq 260 Al Zurfi who was the parliamentary head of the Nasr coalition that was created by former PM Haider al Abadi also has 30 days to form a new cabinet that is subject to approval by the parliament 261 According to the BBC larger groups were unable to concur on choosing Abdel Mahdi s successor which subsequently led to the appointment of Zurif by President Saleh 262 However Protesters in Tahrir Square turned down al Zurfi s nomination regarding him as part and parcel of the corrupt regime they ve been trying to sweep away 263 The U N special envoy to Iraq Jeanine Hennis Plasschaert applauded Zurif s nomination adding that the country requires a powerful and efficient PM 264 New evidence has come to light as a result of an investigation conducted by Amnesty International and SITU Research which showed that Iraqi security forces have been intentionally using smoke grenades and heavy tear gas to kill protesters instead of breaking up crowds since October last year when the protests commenced The research encompassed thorough video analysis and a 3D reconstruction of incidents near Baghdad s Tahrir Square and Jimhouriya Bridge according to Urdu Point News 265 266 Based on their findings the grenades which were produced by Serbians and Iranians saw to the fatal destruction of at least two dozen demonstrators in the place of the incident since October last year 267 21 March Protesters in Tahrir Square and other parts of Iraq disclosed that their anti government protests had officially come to an end as they have decided to go back to their homes until the coronavirus has been defeated 268 29 March Regardless of the COVID 19 pandemic and curfew in Iraq few protesters in Baghdad have decided to adopt a systematic way of maintaining the protest camps while engaging the security forces as well as the deadly virus 269 Prime Minister designate Adnan al Zurfi pledged to use all resources at his disposal within both the public and private sector as he announces the initiation of a government program to effectively tackle the coronavirus outbreak 270 April Edit 4 April Prime Minister designate Adnan Zurfi handed over his plans to the Iraqi parliament as demonstrators refused to obey curfew imposed by the government leading to the eruption of violence with security forces Several Iraqi security forces were reported to have sustained injuries in the process of firing tear gas at protesters in Nasiriya who responded by throwing gasoline bombs at them according to The Baghdad Post 271 272 Despite anti government protests having been officially put on hold earlier last week in order to deal with the COVID 19 pandemic protesters continue to remain in major protest sites as they claim that the killings of activists are yet to stop 273 6 April The American oil company located in the oil rich Basra province of southern Iraq came under attack as five rockets were reportedly fired close to the site Iraqi military confirmed 274 The Security forces added that at least three Katyusha missiles were fired leaving zero casualties according to the MEM 275 Following the attack a rocket launcher with 11 unused missiles was also discovered by the Iraqi security forces along the Zubair Shuaiba road but they were able to defuse them 276 However no group has been linked to the attack yet 277 7 April A strategic dialogue between Washington and the Iraqi government is scheduled to take place in June the US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo disclosed He added that several issues are expected to be ironed out including the position of US military forces currently staying in Iraq 278 279 Considering the growing tensions in the region Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi has also expressed his support for the initiation of a dialogue between the two countries according to The Jerusalem Post 280 9 April Prime minister designate Adnan al Zurfi tendered his resignation which a few hours later led to the nomination of Intelligence chief Mustafa al Kadhimi as his successor by President Barham Saleh 281 According to Zurfi s statement his country s best interests are what prompted his decision to resign including internal and external reasons Zurfi further extended his sincere apologies to all Iraqis that invested their trust in him 282 283 After al Kadhimi s nomination he assured Iraqis that he would primarily ensure that he meets their demands and also establish a well functioning government 284 Considering that Kadhimi has the support of several political parties in Iraq he is predicted to not suffer the same fate as his former predecessors according to VOA News 285 10 April Prime Minister designate Mustafa al Kadhimi was officially congratulated on his new appointment when he received a phone call from top Kurdish officials according to the Middle East Monitor 286 Although Kadhimi is the third candidate within the last 10 weeks he is most likely to flourish in establishing a new government seeing that he was presented by President Salih at a formal ceremony in the midst of many high profile and famous politicians 287 According to Aljazeera al Khadhimi has maintained that he will be able to form a new government by 25 April which is two weeks earlier before the 30 days given to him to form a new cabinet as stipulated in the constitution 288 11 April In an effort to begin the formation of a new cabinet Iraqi Prime Minister designate Mustafa al Kadhimi held a meeting with the Minister of Finance Fuad Hussein Kadhimi emphasized during the meeting that his new government would be that which caters for the needs of the general public by providing essential services 289 290 According to Kurdistan 24 the finance minister revealed that his meeting with al Kadhimi was a friendly one as they talked about the specific steps to be taken regarding the formation of his new government and the problems Iraq is facing 212 15 April Turkey reportedly violated Iraq s airspace when Turkish drones and airplanes carried out an airstrike near the Makhmour Refugee Camp according to The Jerusalem Post 291 Two women in the refugee camp were said to have lost their lives during the incident according to the air defense command in Iraq 292 16 April The Iraqi foreign ministry reacted to the attack carried out near a refugee camp in Iraq by Turkish drones on Wednesday evening as the foreign minister Muhammad Al Hakim summoned the Turkish ambassador to Iraq 293 Furthermore the foreign ministry called on Turkey to recognize Iraq s sovereignty collaboration in enforcing border security and putting a stop to the attacks on Iraqi regions citation needed 21 April A few hours after the restrictions regarding coronavirus were slightly relaxed at least one protester was reportedly killed during violence with protesters who took to the streets near Tahrir Square in Baghdad by unidentified gunmen leaving many others injured 294 295 The restrictions were relaxed due to the Muslim holy month of Ramadan which is expected to last until 22 May at the end of the holy month The Jerusalem Post added 296 297 In Baghdad movements will only be permitted from 6 am to 7 am from Sundays to Thursdays and all day long on Friday Saturday However schools and universities are not expected to reopen and all flights will stay shut down according to Reuters Government buildings will only keep up the capacity of their staff to a maximum of 25 298 299 May Edit 7 May The newly formed cabinet of Prime Minister Mustafa al Kadhimi was confirmed by the Iraqi parliament 266 members of parliament out of a total of 329 members were present for the session seeing to the approval of the majority of ministers submitted by al Kadhimi 300 301 According to Kurdistan 24 only 5 out of 22 ministerial nominees were rejected by the parliament The ministers rejected included those for agriculture trade culture migration and justice 302 303 Since the resignation of the previous PM amidst large anti government protests in November 2019 al Kadhimi is regarded as the first real prime minister in Iraq 304 The new PM affirmed that his primary focus as prime minister would be to fight the COVID 19 outbreak as well as bringing those responsible for the unlawful killing of protesters in anti government protests to justice 305 The U S Secretary of State Mike Pompeo expressed his support for the new cabinet during a call with al Kadhimi according to Reuters 306 9 May After the assumption of office on Thursday the new Iraqi prime minister Mustafa al Kadhimi presided over his first cabinet meeting 307 During the meeting al Kadhimi emphasized that his top priority as PM is to hold early parliamentary elections by backing the Independent High Electoral Commission of Iraq IHEC Other vital issues such as health security and economic situation were also addressed in the meeting Kadhimi also reportedly held meetings with the ambassadors of both US and Iran Matthew H Tueller and Iraj Masjedi VOA News added 308 309 310 Furthermore with the exception of those accused of killings during the anti government protests that lasted for several months al Kadhimi has promised that his cabinet will see to the release of innocent protesters that have been in detention 311 10 May Following the promise made by the new Iraqi prime minister Mustafa al Kadhimi to free protesters that have been detained during the anti government protests which began in October 2019 protesters gathered in hundreds in Baghdad s Tahrir Square Despite the firm security put in place several protesters also gathered in the streets of cities such as Diwaniyah Muthanna Wasit Dhi Qar according to the MEM 312 313 During the demonstration the protesters called for immediate reforms by the government prosecution of those accused of being responsible for the unlawful killings of hundreds of protesters 314 Meanwhile protesters in the southern province of Basra called for governor Asaad al Eidani s dismissal from office alongside his two deputies according to Kurdistan 24 The calls for the removal of the Basra governor were made after armed men opened fire at the building of Iranian backed militia Thaa r Allah leaving one protester dead and four others wounded 315 316 Amidst the renewal of fresh anti government protests in Iraq the Supreme Judiciary Council on Sunday issued a statement ordering courts to see to the release of protesters that were arrested since protests began last year The release of the protesters by the Iraqi judiciary was ordered based on demands made by the new prime minister al Kadhimi the Washington Post added 317 318 Also Mustafa al Kadhimi promoted the Iraqi general Lt Gen Abdul Wahab al Saadi who played a vital role in the war against Islamic State and was subsequently demoted last year by Abdul Mahdi 319 11 May Following the killing of one protester outside the building of a local party s headquarters in Basra on Sunday Iraqi security forces raided the building detaining at least five men accused of carrying out the shootings Prime minister Al Kadhimi confirmed that the raid by the security forces was carried out based on his orders in accordance with judicial warrants Al Monitor added 320 321 A statement from the White House revealed that President Trump spoke with the new Iraqi prime minister over the phone in order to congratulate him on the endorsement of his new cabinet by the Iraqi parliament according to Reuters 322 During the call Trump pledged the support of the U S in assisting Iraq in their fight against the COVID 19 pandemic as well as combating ISIS 323 However according to Kurdistan 24 a strategic dialogue between the US and Iraq is scheduled to hold in June in order to strengthen their relationship 324 18 May The building of the Saudi owned MBC channel in Baghdad was swamped by disgruntled protesters in response to the documentary broadcast by the channel regarding the bombing of French and U S embassies in 1983 The angry protesters portrayed the documentary as an insult to the late Shia leader Abu Mahdi al Muhandis which depicted him as a terrorist 325 326 327 Photos of al Muhandis and Iraqi flags were waved by the protesters demanding for the closure of the channel as well as chanting slogans against Saudi Arabia during the protest 328 The MBC channel disclosed that no injuries were recorded during the demonstration according to the Daily Star 326 According to Anadolu Agency In an attempt to control the protest security forces were dispatched to the site even though the demonstrators had already made their way into the building severely damaging all equipment inside 329 However there are no certainties as to whether the protesters who stormed the building are associated with any Iranian backed organisation in Iraq 330 23 May A report from the Human Rights office of the UN Assistance Mission in Iraq revealed the disappearance of over 100 people with several others tortured by armed groups since protests began in October last year All of the tortured or abducted victims were either involved in the anti government protests or had provided a form of assistance to protesters the UNAMI added 331 332 According to Kurdistan 24 the report showed that 123 people went missing between 1 October 2019 and 21 March 2020 while 98 of them have been found 25 others are yet to be found 333 The male victims confirmed that they were tortured beaten and electrocuted whereas the female victims also confirmed being tortured and even molested or compelled with rape 334 26 May After revising the report provided by the United Nations Human Rights Office in Iraq on Saturday the new government of Mustafa al Kadhimi has promised to launch an investigation into the incidents covered in the report thoroughly The office of the new PM added that the investigations will be absolutely independent without any bias 335 336 The UN Security Council has urged the Iraqi government to ensure that the investigations are as accurate as possible 337 June Edit 15 June Human Rights Watch HRW a US based rights group released a 42 page document which suggested that the previous Iraqi government had denied activists and journalists their right to critics as well as free speech 338 The group has called on both the Iraqi and Kurdistan Region to enforce reforms of its penal code including other laws such that they will be in accordance with international law 339 July Edit 6 July The renowned Iraqi expert on armed groups Hisham al Hashimi was reportedly shot dead in the capital Baghdad 340 The incident took place near Hashimi s residence in the district of Zayouna when two armed men riding a motorbike shot him after which he sustained grave injuries and was taken to the Ibn Al Nafees Hospital in Baghdad where he died The CCTV footage of the incident suggested that Hashimi s killers were highly trained professionals as they shot him several times at a point blank distance Arab news added 341 342 343 Iraqi security officials stated that prior to al Hashimi s assassination he was believed to have received threats from Iran backed militias according to the guardian Also a source told TRT World that a month ago Hashimi revealed the amount of Iraq s revenue that was absconded by Iran backed militias 344 345 7 July Following the assassination of al Hashimi Iraqi protesters on Tuesday criticized Iran s supreme leader al Khamenei describing him as a killer and blaming Iran backed groups for the death of al Hashimi 346 12 July A protest spokesman disclosed that Iraqi security forces killed two people and injured several others when they opened fire on a gathering of protesters in southern Baghdad Rudaw reported Thousands of protesters gathered in Baghdad from different provinces of southern Iraq in order to reject the termination of a government allocated compensation which was declared by the Iraqi PM Mustafa al Kadhimi as part of an economic reform package 347 However the Iraqi army has denied using live ammunition on protesters claiming that no one was killed and that they only turned the protesters away when they attempted to attack security forces according to army spokesman Yehya Rasoul 348 21 July German art curator and activist Hella Mewis was reportedly abducted in Baghdad according to the Euro News She was said to have been kidnapped outside her office in central Baghdad by unknown militants 349 350 However it is not yet clear as to who is responsible for her abduction The Times reported 351 24 July Iraqi forces reportedly rescued the kidnapped German art curator Hella Mewis spokesman of Iraq s military Yahya Rasool confirmed in a statement No further comments were given as no group has claimed responsibility for the abduction 352 353 The overnight operation was said to have been supported by an investigative court in Baghdad while investigations are still ongoing according to Abdelsattar Bayraqdar the spokesman for Iraq s Supreme Judicial Council 354 According to Iraq s interior ministry the operation in east Baghdad was conducted by a joint task force composed of anti crime units federal police as well as the elite Falcons intelligence forces Subsequently in the afternoon Mewis was handed over to the German embassy in Baghdad and the German foreign minister Heiko Maas hailed the efforts made by both the Iraqi government and security forces 355 356 In the first rallies since Prime Minister Mustafa al Kadhimi was elected at least two protesters were killed in Baghdad during overnight demonstrations on 26 July In addition dozens of people were wounded after officials fired live rounds at the demonstrators who were assembled in Tahrir Square Several members of the security forces were also said to have sustained minor injuries according to the police Al Kadhimi said his administration would investigate Sunday s events and prosecute the guilty party 357 358 A medical source disclosed on Monday that out of the two protesters who died one was killed after being shot with a tear gas canister in the head while the other was shot in the neck according to Arab News 359 Yehia Rasool spokesman of the Iraqi military revealed in a statement that precise instructions had been issued regarding the unlawful use of force by security forces against demonstrators except when absolutely necessary 360 30 July The Iraqi government announced its decision to treat those killed during protests as martyrs and compensate each family with 10 million dinars 8 380 361 Also the committee that was tasked with looking into the death of two protesters on Sunday disclosed that three policemen had been suspended for the use of hunting rifles against demonstrators and are currently awaiting trial The Interior Minister Othman Al Ghanimi who made the announcement also added that the issue had been handed over to the Judiciary with arrest warrants sent out to the three perpetrators 362 363 During the press conference the minister stated that the suspects included two majors and a lieutenant and also revealed the arms and ammunition used by them 364 Meanwhile protesters have declared that they would not stop the demonstrations maintaining that the investigation into the violence does not offer a solution to the country s numerous grievances according to The Independent 365 31 July Prime Minister Mustafa al Kadhimi announced that legislative elections would be held early and scheduled them for 6 June 2021 366 There has not been any confirmation though on whether al Kadhimi would seek for a second term despite holding early elections 367 August Edit 11 August A drone attack was reportedly launched in the Kurdish region in northern Iraq which claimed the lives of two top officers of the Iraqi military forces 368 Following the attack the 13 August scheduled visit by the Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar to Baghdad was said to have been called off by Iraq Also the Turkish ambassador was summoned for the third time over Turkey s military actions in the country Arab News added 369 370 Despite the drone attack Turkey has maintained that it would not stop its cross border operations against the PKK fighters in the region and has further called on the Iraqi authorities to extend their cooperation 371 19 August Unknown gunmen reportedly shot and killed a female anti government political activist in Iraq s southern city Basra Three others were said to have been injured when the gunmen on a motorcycle opened fire on their vehicle with the victim Reham Yacoub inside According to Al Jazeera the three others injured were all women although one of them died 372 373 21 August In Basra protesters set fire to a local parliament office after gathering to demand the resignation of governor Asaad Al Eidani for the killing of two activists the previous week 374 The protesters were able to set the outer gate of the parliament building ablaze as they clashed with security forces At least 8 security personnel were believed to have been wounded during the violence according to Al Jazeera 375 376 Following the clashes Iraqi PM Mustafa al Kadhimi reportedly visited Basra late on Saturday 22 August and assured that the perpetrators will face punishment over the killings He also sacked Basra s police chief in response to the continued unrest the National added 377 378 Separately protesters in the southern city of Nasiriyah were said to have destroyed the offices of Shiite parties in response to an explosion that left 11 protesters injured in Nasiriyah s Haboubi Square 379 Eyewitnesses on the scene confirmed that the protesters used bulldozers to demolish the offices of the Dawa Party and Badr Organization although they had already set the buildings on fire 380 September Edit 20 September Several Iraqi protesters reportedly gathered overnight in the city of Nasiriyah Dhi Qar province to criticize the abduction of a renowned activist including the injury of another activist Three main bridges alongside roads were said to have been shut down by the protesters as they burnt down tires 381 382 Two pick up vehicles were used by unidentified persons to abduct the young activist Sajjad al Iraqi while leaving the other activist Basim Falaih wounded after shooting him according to eyewitnesses 383 Members of the tribe of deputy leader of the Popular Mobilization Forces Abu Mahdi al Muhandis who was killed by an American drone attack in January are being held responsible by some activists in Nasiriyah for Sajjad s abduction 384 However security forces have managed to ID the location of the abducted anti government activist by tracking phone calls the state media disclosed 385 21 September Following the kidnapping of prominent Iraqi activist Sajjad al Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al Kadhimi on Monday directed a joint operation consisting of a special anti terror force and the army s air force to search for the activist who was taken by unknown gunmen in the southern city of Nasiriyah on Saturday 386 Apart from rescuing the pro demonstration activist the units of the Counter Terrorism Service have also being instructed by the PM to ensure that the kidnappers are captured and brought to face punishment 387 Subsequently two people from Sayed Dakhil district in Dhi Qar province were charged with the abduction of Sajjad al Iraqi as their arrest warrants were issued by the Iraqi authorities 388 In spite of issuing arrest warrants for the two suspects the Iraqi counter terrorism service ICTS is yet to make any success in finding Sajjad al Iraqi even though they have continued their search 389 28 September Iraq s Defense Ministry disclosed that a rocket attack close to Baghdad s airport claimed the lives of five civilians Two Katyusha rockets were said to have been fired by armed groups which killed three children and two women leaving two other children injured The rockets which landed at a house in Baghdad were initially targeted for the Baghdad airport according to Police sources 390 391 392 Reports suggested that the rockets were fired from the Al Jihad neighborhood of Baghdad Arab News added 393 Following the unfortunate incident Iraqi PM Mustapha al Kadhimi gave a directive suspending security forces from duty at the airport according to BBC 394 The US State Department criticized the attack which was launched just after giving out a warning regarding shutting down its embassy in Baghdad if the Iraqi government is unable to curb attacks against US and other Coalition members The Department has also called on the Iraqi authorities to take prompt response and ensure that the perpetrators are brought to face justice 395 396 October Edit 1 October Iraq s protest reached its one year mark as thousands of protesters took to the streets in Baghdad including the southern part of the country to honor the anniversary of protests which began in October 2019 397 Several protesters waved the Iraqi flag chanted and sang songs of patriotism by clapping and pledged to follow the path of revolutionaries Protesters who gathered in Tahrir Square were sighted raising pictures of more than 600 people who died since the beginning of the protests last year in Baghdad and across southern Iraq 398 399 According to the Middle East Eye protesters have issued a deadline to the Iraqi government to meet their demands by 25 October or they embark on a nationwide strike 400 11 October A faction of Iraqi militia groups which are backed by Iran have presented the Iraqi government with the option of a ceasefire agreement against assault on US forces The ceasefire option provided by the groups was based on the stipulation of a timeframe for the retreat of US troops being provided by the government 401 402 No specific deadline has been issued by the groups but they have threatened to continue carrying out attacks if the US forces refuse to withdraw according to a spokesman of one of the strongest Iran backed militia groups in Iraq Kataib Hezbollah 403 The spokesman Mohammed Mohi also added that the ceasefire would consist of the entire factions of the anti U S resistance as well as other groups that have been attacking US troops 404 A few hours prior to the announcement of the temporary ceasefire deal by the groups a convoy that was carrying equipment for the U S led coalition was reportedly targeted with a roadside bomb according to the Associated Press During the attack which occurred in southern Iraq one vehicle in the convoy was damaged Iraq s military disclosed 405 406 However no casualties were reported or those responsible for the attack 407 17 October Several supporters of the Popular Mobilization Forces reportedly set the Kurdish party s headquarters in Baghdad ablaze following criticisms from a Kurdish former minister The protesters of the Iran backed Shia militia group were frustrated with the remarks made by the former minister Hoshyar Zebari that the Iraqi government should steer clear Baghdad s Green Zone of PMF militias 408 409 They also burned down Kurdish flags with others holding pictures of the slain Iranian general Qasem Soleimani including that of Iraqi lieutenant Abu Mahdi al Muhandis 410 Iraqi high ranking officials have criticized the attack by the Hashd al Shaabi protesters and called for an investigation into the attack Also President Barzani has criticized the attack on the KDP offices and urged the Iraqi government to carry out a comprehensive probe into the incident 411 412 25 October Thousands of Iraqi protesters took back to the streets of Baghdad as the anti government protests reached its one year mark 413 At least 42 security personnel including about a dozen protesters were said to have been wounded after the peaceful protests turned violent when protesters attempted to break through a barricade set up by the security forces according to The Washington Post Security forces responded with tear gas after the anti government protesters threw Molotov cocktails and rocks at them 414 415 Demonstrations also reportedly took place in several other cities such as Nasiriyah Basra and Najaf with protesters decrying the level of corruption in the country 416 26 October The protests which started on Sunday entered its second day with several protesters clashing with Iraqi security forces again Demonstrators shifted to the highly fortified Green Zone in Baghdad where government offices parliament building and US embassy are located 417 418 Also security forces under the Baghdad Operations Command stopped several protesters coming from Babylon and Diwanieh provinces from making their way into Baghdad by mounting checkpoints on the roads AP News added 419 November Edit 6 November In the city of Basra student anti government protests kicked off According to Al Jazeera one anti government demonstrator was killed by a bullet during rubber bullet firing many police in demonstrators 17 November Following the announcement made by the US to decrease the number of its troops from 3 000 to 2 500 four rockets were believed to have been fired on Iraq s heavily fortified Green Zone in Baghdad During the attack which was launched just an hour after the announcement made by the US at least one child was killed leaving five other civilians wounded the Iraqi military disclosed 420 421 The rockets were reportedly fired from the al Amin al Thaniyah neighborhood of Baghdad the VOA News added Although the C RAM air defense system which was set up by the US earlier in 2020 managed to intercept the rockets 422 423 Despite the US accusing Iran backed militia for attacks in the past no Iran backed militia has taken responsibility for the attack yet 424 27 November Protests in the city of Nasiriyah began in support of Shia popular leader Muqtada al Sadr and demanded that the government should resign Anti government demonstrations spread nationwide according to Al Jazeera Police has been accused of using live ammunition and shooting as a tactic against the demonstrators Mass protesters rallied in their thousands and then chaos and clashes between security forces and protesters left four protesters dead and several demonstrators injured According to a hospital source there was indication of protesters dying as a result of bullet wounds 425 However with early elections being one of the biggest demands of the anti government protesters the Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al Kadhimi has planned for elections to hold next June which is a year earlier than the initial date 426 28 November Following the overnight killing of protesters several people reportedly returned to the sites of the anti government sit ins in order to show their support for those killed 427 As other cities across Iraq take security measures in the deadly clash between anti government protesters and Sadr supporters the death toll in the city of Nasiriyah had reached six according to Al Jazeera 428 December Edit 2 December Several Iraqi civil servants reportedly took to the streets of the Kurdistan Region of northern Iraq to protest over the delay in payment of salaries The protesters were said to have gathered at the epicenter of Sulaimani s anti government protests of 2011 the Saraa square 429 430 Water cannons tear gas rubber bullets including live rounds was believed to have been used by security forces to break up the gathering of protesters according to the Middle East Eye 431 7 December Following days of protests in the northern Kurdish region of Iraq a protester was said to have been killed by armed men who were protecting the headquarters of the Kurdistan Democratic Party KDP Two other protesters were also wounded during the unrest 432 433 According to a statement by the spokesman of the Chamchamal Health Directorate in Sulaymaniyah district Sherif Rahim the protester who was killed was a 16 year old teenager 434 8 December As of Wednesday the death toll was reported to have reached eight people since the beginning of the protests against delayed payment of salaries in Kurdish Iraq 435 In an effort by the Iraqi Kurdish authorities to prevent the violence from extending a 24 hour ban on movement was imposed in Sulaymaniyah and other nearby towns which was expected to last until Wednesday midnight 436 The demonstrations had already extended across six towns surrounding Sulaymaniyah on Tuesday with disgruntled protesters setting government offices and political parties headquarters on fire 437 Iraq s president Barham Salih has urged security forces to adhere to the law and avoid applying unlawful use of force against peaceful protesters 438 The Iraqi president further called on the demonstrators including the security forces to conduct themselves peacefully and not resort to violence 439 Also the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq UNAMI criticized the unlawful use of force that was applied against the demonstrators in Sulaymaniyah district as the citizens right to peaceful protest must be ensured 440 441 9 December According to the Oil Ministry two explosions hit an oil field in northern Kirkuk province on Wednesday which they described as a terrorist attack Despite two small oil wells being set on fire there was no impact on the entire production from the oil field VOA News added 442 443 However no casualties have been reported during the blast so far 444 Meanwhile the Kurdish Prime Minister Masrour Barzani has blamed Baghdad for the ongoing violence which erupted due to the delay in payment of salaries in Iraq s northern Kurdish region 445 Barzani added that the Iraqi government failed to carry out the budget transfers which were required to make the payments of salary possible 446 15 December Salah al Iraqi a notable Iraqi activist was reportedly killed by unknown gunmen in Baghdad according to Al Jazeera 447 Local media reports suggested that Salah was shot five times by the unknown assailants who were in masks in the suburb of Baghdad al Jadeed 448 Salah al Iraqi was said to have played a vital role in anti government protests that began last year against deteriorating economic conditions corruption and massive unemployment rate 449 According to the Iraqi Network for Social Media INSM prior to al Iraqi s killing on Tuesday he had already been targeted twice 449 20 December Just two weeks to the one year anniversary of the killing of Iranian general Qassem Soleimani reports have shown that the US Embassy in Baghdad s heavily fortified Green Zone has been under a rocket attack 450 At least eight Katyusha rockets were said to have been fired at the Green Zone on Sunday which led to a few damages on the compound the US embassy and Iraqi military disclosed 451 According to CNN at least one Iraqi soldier was wounded when one of the rockets landed close to a security checkpoint 452 Although the U S Embassy s C RAM defense system was said to have been activated during the attack in order to intercept the rockets the ABC News added 453 However in a statement made by the U S Secretary of State Mike Pompeo revealed that there had been at least one Iraqi civilian that was injured 454 Meanwhile the US embassy has urged all Iraqi leaders to ensure that the perpetrators face justice and also take preventive measures from these kinds of attacks 455 Timeline 2021 EditJanuary Edit Thousands of Iraqis demanded United States armed forces pull out of the country in protests in Liberation Square Baghdad one year after the American drone strike which killed Qasem Soleimani and Iraq s militia commander Abu Mahdi al Muhandis The anniversary of their deaths in Baghdad was also marked in Iran and by supporters in Syria Lebanon Yemen and elsewhere in the Middle East 456 The place where both Soleimani and al Muhandis were killed became a shrine like area which was sealed off by red ropes including their pictures in the center by the protesters 457 8 January Just a day after a massive crackdown against activists in Nasiriyah s Habboubi Square Iraqi security forces clashed with protesters as they fired tear gas and bullets to disperse the crowd 458 A day prior to the clashes Ali al Hamami a lawyer and local activist was said to have been killed in his home by unidentified assailants according to Kurdistan 24 459 10 January As the protest in the southern city of Nasiriyah entered its third day a policeman was reportedly killed by gunshot to the head with 33 other policemen wounded according to the Iraqi army Additionally medical sources confirmed that 7 protesters were also injured during the clashes with security forces 460 461 It was not immediately clear who was behind the killing of the policeman as the army did not provide further details on the incident 462 Despite the ongoing violence between the protesters and security forces protesters who are currently occupying Haboubi Square have maintained not leaving the site until one of their major demands which is releasing all those who have been detained is met 463 However reports have shown that all the detainees have now been released the Iraqi High Commission for Human Rights IHCHR confirmed 464 January 19 Following the request made by Iraq s Independent High Electoral Commission for additional to prepare for the polls which are supposed to hold on June 6 the Iraqi cabinet voted unanimously to move the general elections to October 10 2021 Prime Minister Mustafa al Kadhimi explained in a statement that the postponement was to allow the IHEC adequate time to ensure the conduct of a free and fair election 465 466 Nevertheless there are growing concerns among activists and protesters who see the postponement of the elections as a move to overlook their major demands 467 21 January A twin explosion reportedly hit a commercial street close to Tayaran Square in Baghdad At least 28 people were killed during the attack with 73 other people wounded according to the Deutsche Welle 468 469 The first suicide bomber was said to have detonated his explosives after convincing people to gather around him as he rushed into the market claiming to be sick Subsequently the second bomber set off his explosives as people gathered around the victims of the first attack the interior ministry disclosed 470 471 There haven t been any immediate claims of responsibility by any group yet for the deadly attack 472 Medics have expressed their concerns over the possibility of a drastic increase in the death toll from the initial figures as security forces continue to guard the site of the blast 473 February Edit 14 February Four suspects were detained in southern Iraq s Basra by security forces on the allegation of killing protesters and activists 474 According to Al Monitor the four suspects have already confessed to the killing of two journalists Jinan Madhi Al Shahmani and Ahmad Abdessamad They are also said to be members of a 16 person network as the Iraqi intelligence is still trying to identify the rest of the members of the network 475 476 However it was not made clear as to whether the four suspects who have been apprehended are linked with any paramilitary force or political party 477 15 February An airport in the city of Erbil in northern Iraq was hit by a rocket which claimed the life of a civilian contractor with the American led military coalition forces At least nine people were wounded during the attack according to the Guardian A US service member was also reported to have been among the wounded victims 478 479 Subsequently after the rocket attack the airport was reportedly closed 480 16 February The US alongside its various European counterparts criticized the attack on the US airbase and assured to assist Iraq with the investigation US Secretary of State Antony Blinken revealed in a statement 481 18 February Protests reportedly erupted near the Turkish embassy in Baghdad to condemn the Turkish military intervention in the northern region of Iraq Roads leading to the Turkish embassy had to be shut down by the Iraqi security forces according to Arab News 482 483 March Edit April Edit 1 April Three oil facilities in southern Iraq s Dhi Qar Governorate were reportedly shut down by protesters due to the federal budget that was approved by the Iraqi parliament on Wednesday 484 The protesters believed that the new budget did not address the protesters urgent need for employment opportunities 485 4 April Just a few days ahead of strategic Iraq U S talks two rockets landed close to the Balad airbase in northern Baghdad 486 There were no immediate reports of casualties damage of properties or claims of responsibility for the attack 487 7 April Five policemen were reportedly charged by an Iraqi investigative committee in connection to the unlawful discharge of firearms on protesters in the last week of February in Nasiriyah 488 12 April Iraqi President Barham Salih revealed the signing of a decree which is supposed to ensure that early elections are conducted on 10 October 489 According to Iraq s Independent High Electoral Commission more than 25 million Iraqis are qualified to vote in the upcoming October elections with the exception of those staying overseas 490 18 April An Iraqi air base north of Baghdad was targeted by several rockets according to an Iraqi military commander 491 According to the Times of Israel five rockets were fired at the Balad air base housing US troops with two of them hitting a dormitory and canteen inside the airbase 492 At least five people were injured during the attack three of which were Iraqi soldiers and two other foreign contractors 493 There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack by any group although Iranian backed armed groups have claimed responsibility for similar attacks in the past 494 Also no casualties were recorded during the incident Al Jazeera added 495 22 April Another rocket attack was launched close to the Baghdad International Airport the Iraqi military revealed 496 At least three rockets were said to have landed near the perimeter of the airport Also Iraqi security forces were able to defuse pre launched rockets which were kept on the rooftop of an unoccupied building that was used for the rocket launch 497 498 There were no immediate reports of casualties or property damages according to Reuters 499 May Edit 9 May An Iraqi activist Ihab Al Wazni who had survived an assassination attempt which killed Fahim al Ta i in December 2019 was shot dead outside his home by armed men on motorbikes in Karbala 500 Following his death protests erupted in Iraq s Karbala as protesters went on to burn tires and shut down roads in the city Trailers of the Iranian consulate in the city were also set ablaze by the protesters VOA News added 501 502 Protests were also held in the capital Baghdad including other cities in southern Iraq with protesters setting the headquarters of Iran backed militias and government offices ablaze 503 The Iraqi police have assured that they will leave no stone unturned as they are determined to bring the perpetrators behind the killing of Ihab al Wazni to justice 504 10 May An Iraqi journalist Ahmed Hassan was entered into intensive care receiving two bullets in the head and one in the shoulder as he got out of his car in Al Diwaniyah According to BBC News brain surgery was performed on Hassan after being admitted into the intensive care at a hospital in Baghdad 505 506 Both Hassan and Wazni were said to have played a vital role during the protest against the Iraqi government in October 2019 France 24 added 507 15 May Several Iraqi demonstrators gathered in Baghdad to show support for Palestinians over the Israeli airstrikes on Gaza 508 The rallies were said to have been in response to calls made by influential cleric Muqtada al Sadr including other parliamentary leaders Sadr was also said to have pledged his support to Palestinian armed groups in Gaza the Euronews added 509 510 Palestinian flags were waved by the protesters as they were shouting anti Israel slogans and condemning Israel and America 511 25 May One protester was killed and dozens were injured when police attacked protesters gathered at Baghdad s Tahrir Square in the evening where hundreds marched to demand the end of targeted killings of prominent journalists and activists Five policemen were also reported to have been among those who were injured when protesters hurled stones at the security forces 512 513 Among the protesters who gathered at the Tahrir s Square several of them came from across southern Iraqi cities where several deaths had been recorded 514 Tear gas and live ammunition were said to have been used by the Iraqi security forces in an attempt to disperse the gathering of protesters 515 26 May Iraqi security forces arrested the head of the Al Anbar faction of the Popular Mobilization Forces Qasim Muslih for his role in the killing of two civil activists including Al Wazni s Musleh has also been linked with attacks on bases hosting coalition forces Al Monitor added 516 517 However a government source revealed that a military and security committee has been established to carry out the investigation into the case 518 The Iraqi PM Al Kadhimi was also reported to have held a meeting with top Shiite political leaders prior to ordering the formation of an investigative committee 519 A report by Human Rights Watch has suggested that there s a possibility of Iraqis being unable to vote in the upcoming 2021 elections due to the ongoing impunity 520 Meanwhile as a show of force unknown gunmen were said to have driven vehicles around Baghdad s fortified Green Zone following the arrest of Qasim Muslih As a security measure to protect the government and diplomatic missions the elite Counter Terrorism Service including Iraqi security forces were deployed to the Green Zone 521 522 27 May The US has expressed its anger over the use of force that was applied against peaceful protesters who were demanding reforms 523 They also encouraged the Iraqi government to bring the perpetrators behind the attacks against peaceful demonstrators to justice the US State Department spokesman stated 524 30 May The United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq UNAMI disclosed that over 1 000 cases concerning the use of force against protesters in Iraq were closed mostly as a result of threats issued to the families of the victims 525 June Edit 2 June The threats by the Iran aligned armed militias against the fortified Green Zone were condemned by the UK the foreign minister of UK Dominic Raab revealed in a tweet 526 6 June Iraq s air defenses managed to intercept and shot down two drones at the Ain al Asad air base housing US troops the Iraqi military disclosed In order to bring down the drones the US military s C RAM defense system which is situated in western Iraq had to be launched Al Jazeera added 527 528 There wasn t any immediate claim of responsibility by armed groups regarding the attack despite that Iran backed groups have claimed responsibility in the past for similar attacks 529 Separately hours prior to the shooting down of the two drones that targeted Ain al Assad base a rocket that was fired over Baghdad s airport was also said to have been shot down 530 There were no casualties or damages recorded the U S led military coalition s spokesperson in Iraq revealed 531 9 June Two Iraqi military bases housing US led coalition troops including foreign contractors came under multiple rocket attacks 532 The Balad airbase was said to have been targeted by three rockets although there were no damages or casualties recorded 533 Just a few hours following the attack on the Balad airbase at least one missile also hit near a military base that is next to the Baghdad International Airport 534 An anonymous security source claimed that five rockets were launched from the nearby Khalis District along the banks of the Tigris River according to Kurdistan 24 535 However no immediate claim of responsibility for both attacks was made 536 Separately Iran backed militia commander Qassem Musleh was released after being arrested for two weeks on terrorism allegations and violations against protesters 537 Musleh was released by the judiciary as there wasn t enough evidence to implicate him on the terrorism charges His release was also said to have followed the arrival of Iranian Gen Esmail Ghaani head of the expeditionary Quds Force in Baghdad 538 539 Musleh received a warm welcome from his supporters at Baghdad s Jadriya Bridge upon his release as they snapped pictures and rejoiced together 540 July Edit 2 July With the temperature reaching more than 50 degrees across some parts of Iraq amid deteriorating power and water cuts several Iraqi protesters reportedly took to the streets of Baghdad 541 Particularly the southern provinces of Iraq and most of Baghdad were said to have faced more of the effects of the power cuts 542 Local media reports blamed Friday s power cut on the failure of a major power line BBC added 543 In the city of Kut the protesters gathered outside the closed gates of an electricity substation to condemn the power cuts that have left them with only several hours of electricity in a day 544 Also on Friday a statement from the office of the Iraqi PM Mustafa al Kadhimi revealed that the director of Iraq s national electricity company had been fired and that the PM has reassured the restoration of electricity 545 8 July Widespread protests over power cuts have continued across Iraq including Basra whose temperature has exceeded 50 degrees The protesters maintained that the power outages were a result of rampant corruption as well as the inadequacy of infrastructure 546 547 Meanwhile three rockets targeted the US embassy in Baghdad s heavily fortified Green Zone despite earlier attacks on bases housing US troops 548 According to the Iraqi military the US embassy was not hit during the attack but three places close to the Green Zone were hit The embassy s defense system managed to divert one of the rockets that were fired according to Reuters One of the rockets landed on the outskirts of a residential area one was close to the headquarters of the National Security Agency and the other was at a public square 549 550 551 16 July The Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al Kadhimi revealed that arrests have been made regarding the killing of renowned analyst Hisham al Hashimi in early July 2020 552 One of the suspects who were arrested Ahmed al Kenani was said to have been connected with Kata ib Hezbollah which Hashimi criticized in the past according to a security source 553 18 July Several Iraqi protesters took to the streets of Baghdad calling for justice over the killings of activists since the beginning of the anti government protest movement in 2019 554 Protests were also said to have been held in southern Iraq s Nasiriyah 555 24 July Just a day after the son of a renowned Iraqi activist went missing he was reportedly found shot dead in the southern Iraqi city of Basra 556 26 year old Ali Karim son of Basra activist Fatima al Bahadly was said to have been abducted on 23 July by unknown assailants 557 According to a medical source Karim was shot twice once in the head and the other in his chest 558 Haider al Abadi former Iraqi PM criticized the incessant killing of activists as he mourned the death of Fatima al Bahadly s son 559 November Edit Hundreds were injured and two people were killed in violent clashes in Baghdad after the parliamentary elections These protests had demanded the election results be recounted after alleging election fraud 560 See also EditIrreligion in Iraq 2020s in political history 2018 2022 Arab protests 2015 2018 Iraqi protests Politics of Iraq Safaa Al Sarai 2021 Baghdad clashes Attack on the Al Habboubi Square 2020 2020 Kurdish protests in Sulaymaniyah Governorate 2022 Iraqi political crisisReferences Edit Iraqi protesters block major port near Basra as unrest continues Al Jazeera 2019 11 02 Anti government protests Is This Iraq s Arab Spring Qantara de Qantara de 2019 11 06 Protests in Iraq turn into anti Iranian demonstrations Daily Sabah 2019 10 27 Abdul Ahad Ghaith 2019 10 29 Iraq s young protesters count cost of a month of violence The Guardian New Iraqi party challenges Iran advocates for normalisation Hammam Latif AW Morgan Azaria 2019 10 03 Protest movements in Iraq in the age of a new civil society Rubin Alissa J 2019 11 04 Iraqis Rise Against a Reviled Occupier Iran The New York Times Al Janabi Abdul Qadir 2019 10 20 من هو أبوزينب اللامي ولماذا يتهم بتصفية متظاهري العراق Al Arabiya in Arabic مركز توثيق جرائم الحرب بالعراق 669 قتيلا بالمظاهرات Iraqi War Crime Documentation Centre 669 demonstrators killed Al Arabiya in Arabic 2020 01 13 Archived from the original on 2020 01 14 Retrieved 2020 01 23 Iraq HRW denounces lethal force against protesters urges probe www aljazeera com Arraf Jane 2021 09 18 There Is Chaos Iran Backed Militias Battle Activists in a Holy Iraqi City The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2021 10 18 Exclusive Iran backed militias deployed snipers in Iraq protests sources Reuters 2019 10 17 Retrieved 2021 10 18 Pro Iran militia supporters converge on Baghdad protests the Guardian 2019 12 05 Retrieved 2021 10 18 Iraq protests What s behind the anger BBC News 2019 10 07 Retrieved 2019 10 27 They are worse than Saddam Iraqis take to streets to topple regime The Guardian 2019 10 27 Retrieved 2019 10 28 An Iraq for All Iraqis Providence 2019 11 26 Retrieved 2019 11 28 Iraq Protester s Step Up Their Tactics As the Government in Baghdad Scrambles to Respond Foreign Policy 2019 11 07 Retrieved 2019 11 18 Sly Liz 2011 02 12 Egyptian revolution sparks protest movement in democratic Iraq The Washington Post Protesters In Iraqi Cities Demand Better Social Services Corruption Probes Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 2011 02 12 Archived from the original on 2011 02 22 Iraqis anger spelled out in street protests Al Sumaria 2011 02 12 Archived from the original on 2011 02 22 Retrieved 2019 10 26 فرض حظر التجول في كركوك Al Jazeera in Arabic 2011 03 01 Rayburn Joel 2014 08 01 Iraq After America Strongmen Sectarians Resistance Hoover Institution Press p 235 ISBN 978 0 8179 1694 7 a b Protests in Iraq continue amid new killings Al Jazeera 2013 02 22 Griffis Margaret 2013 04 23 At least 86 Iraqis Killed in Ongoing Violence Triggered by Protests Antiwar com The JRTN Movement and Iraq s Next Insurgency Combating Terrorism Center at West Point Archived from the original on 2011 08 26 Retrieved 2013 04 29 Sowell Kirk H 2014 01 15 Maliki s Anbar Blunder Foreign Policy Archived from the original on 2014 07 05 Spencer Richard Malouf Carol 2014 06 29 We will stand by Isis until Maliki steps down says leader of Iraq s biggest tribe The Telegraph Carter Chelsea J Alkhshali Hamdi Capelouto Susanna 2014 06 23 Kerry assures Iraqis of U S support if they unite against militants Iraqi cleric Muqtada al Sadr calls for Baghdad sit in Al Jazeera 2016 03 12 Thousands of protesters break into Baghdad Green Zone Samaa 2016 04 30 Sadr followers storm into Baghdad s Green Zone political crisis deepens ARY News 2016 04 30 Saeedi Hassan 2018 07 16 VIDEO Iraqi protesters burn pictures of Khomeini in Basra Al Arabiya Mustafa Mohamed 2018 11 18 Prominent protest figure in Iraq s Basra assassinated Iraqi News Iran flights to Iraq s Najaf redirected to Baghdad Iranian state TV Reuters 2018 07 15 a b Two killed in clashes in southern Iraq as protesters demand better services jobs ABC News 2018 07 16 Turak Natasha 2018 07 19 More turmoil in Iraq as deadly protests ravage oil rich south CNBC Seven dead more than 30 wounded in southern Iraq s rally Yenisafak 2018 09 05 a b Iraq protests How should the government and the US respond Atlantic Council Atlantic Council 2019 10 03 Retrieved 2019 10 27 Explainer Deadly civil unrest what is happening in Iraq Reuters Reuters 2019 10 05 Retrieved 2019 10 27 Southern Iraq Basra protests resume as temperatures and anger rise The National 2019 06 20 مصدر القوات الامنية تطلق سراح المتظاهرين من حملة الشهادات العليا Al Sumeria in Arabic 2019 09 25 a b c مفتشية الداخلية تصدر بيانا بشأن الاعتداء على حملة الشهادات العليا NRT in Arabic 2019 09 26 بعد أزمة حملة الشهادات العليا نقابة الأكاديميين تدعو الحكومة العراقية إلى الاستقالة Rudaw in Arabic 2019 09 26 ناشطون نجفيون ينظمون وقفة احتجاجية تضامنا مع حملة الشهادات العليا Al Sumeria in Arabic 2019 09 27 احتجاجات حملة الشهادات العليا تمتد من بغداد إلى البصرة Rudaw in Arabic 2019 09 27 حملة الشهادات العليا يتظاهرون اليوم في تحد جديد Al Zaman in Arabic 2019 09 28 الساعدي السجن أرحم من تنفيذ قرار نقلي الى امرة وزارة الدفاع Baghdad Post in Arabic 2019 09 27 عالية نصيف استغرب من إحالة الساعدي إلى أمرة وزارة الدفاع وإطلاق يد ضباط فاسدين يتاجرون بالمخدرات Baghdad Post in Arabic 2019 09 28 العبادي ينتقد إقصاء الساعدي والعبيدي يتوقع هلاهل داعشية Kurdistan 24 in Arabic 2019 09 28 Controversy Grips Iraq After Removal of Top Commander Voice of America English www voanews com غضب عارم في العراق بعد عزل قائد عسكري بارز Al Jazeera in Arabic 2019 09 29 غضب بالعراق إثر إقالة قائد مكافحة الإرهاب شاهد Arabi 21 in Arabic 2019 09 29 عبدالمهدي مؤكدا تمسكه بقرار إبعاد الساعدي الضابط يؤم ر وينف ذ ولا يرتاد السفارات Rudaw in Arabic 2019 09 29 العراق الأمن يمنع تدشين تمثال للساعدي Al Arabiya in Arabic 2019 09 30 صور قوة امنية تزيل تمثال عبد الوهاب الساعدي في الموصل Shafaq News in Arabic 2019 09 30 العراق الساعدي يؤكد التحاقه بوزارة الدفاع تنفيذا لأمر عبد المهدي Al Sharq Al Awsat in Arabic 2019 09 30 a b in German Sie wollen Burger sein They want to be citizens Die Zeit 13 November 2019 Retrieved 28 November 2019 Davison John Aboulenein Ahmed 2019 11 29 Threats arrests targeted killings silence Iraqi dissidents Thomson Reuters Archived from the original on 2019 11 29 Retrieved 2019 11 29 29 اغتيالا طالت ناشطين عراقيين ولبغداد حصة الأسد Al Arabiya in Arabic بالفيديو اغتيال إعلامي عراقي برصاصة مباشرة في الرأس Al Arabiya in Arabic 2020 01 10 Two Iraqi journalists shot dead after covering protests in Basra Reports Without Borders 2020 01 11 Hundreds mourn reporters shot dead after covering Iraq protests France 24 2020 01 11 Iraq Protesters Defy New Violence As President Addresses Davos UrduPoint Iraqi activist shot dead in Basra as targeted killings continue Rudaw 2020 08 15 Female protest leader gunned down in Iraq s Basra Middle East Monitor 2020 08 19 Female Protest Leader Gunned Down in Iraq s Basra The New York Times 2020 08 19 UNAMI condemns killings of activists in Basra urges stepped up efforts to ensure accountability reliefweb int 2020 08 20 Berger Miriam These 3 pro Iran militia leaders are provoking protesters at the U S Embassy in Baghdad Washington Post al Mukhtar Othman Fugitive from international justice now militia leader in Iraq alaraby Treasury Designates Individual Entity Posing Threat to Stability in Iraq www treasury gov Trump Threatens Iran After Protesters Attack U S Embassy Compound In Iraq RFE RL U S has no plan to evacuate embassy in Baghdad more forces being sent to compound Reuters 2019 12 31 Retrieved 2020 01 01 Taub Amanda 2020 01 04 Did the Killing of Qassim Suleimani Deter Iranian Attacks or Encourage Them The New York Times Archived from the original on 2020 01 05 a b Iraq s Parliament Calls for Expulsion of U S Troops Time Time Archived from the original on 2020 01 05 Retrieved 2020 01 26 A new wave of Arab protesters say It s the economy stupid CNN 2019 10 04 Saadoun Mustafa 2019 10 11 Abdul Mahdi pressured into staying in office Al Monitor متظاهرون في بغداد يرددون شعارات ضد قائد فيلق القدس الإيراني قاسم سليماني in Arabic 2019 10 24 Kirby Jen 2019 11 05 Iraq s protests explained Vox Iraq declares curfew in Baghdad until further notice PM Reuters 2019 10 02 Iraq Authorities must immediately rein in security forces Iraqi News 2019 10 03 Five more Iraqis killed as deadly protests continue in Dhi Qar 2019 10 05 قوات أمنية تداهم قناتين فضائيتين في بغداد قناة الحرة Iraqi Army Ordered Out of Sadr City Where Dozens Died at Protests New York Times The Associated Press 2019 10 07 Protests in Iraq may unseat the government Atlantic Council 2019 10 17 Retrieved 2019 11 15 Iraqi pilgrims protest corruption during Arbaeen march Arab News 2019 10 19 Two Day Death Toll in Violent Iraq Protests Reaches 67 Voice of America بعد اشتباكات ليلية بين ميليشيات بغداد ترسل تعزيزات أمنية لجنوب العراق قناة الحرة in Arabic IRAQI SHIITE MILITIA LEADER QAIS KHAZALI ISRAEL AND AMERICA WILL PAY FOR THE KILLING OF PMU MEMBERS BY PROTESTERS 27 October 2019 Iraqi protesters set fire to political party offices in Muthanna province Egypt Independent 2019 10 25 في كربلاء هتافات ضد إيران وتمزيق صورة خامنئي IMLebanon in Arabic 2019 10 25 a b Protests in Iraq are met with violence The Economist 2019 10 30 الديوانية تعلن تعطيل الدوام الرسمي ليوم غدا الاحد واستمرار حظر التجوال قناه السومرية العراقية in Arabic الان حرق بيت وزير الداخلية السابق قاسم الاعرجي في واسط وبيان بتأجيل الاحتجاجات الى ليلة راس السنة in Arabic Iraqi PM Sends Counter Terror Force To Put Down Street Protests RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Iraq clashes at least 15 die as counter terror police quell protests The Guardian 2019 10 27 Iraq Declares Baghdad Curfew in Quest to Quell Protests The Media Line 2019 10 28 Retrieved 2019 10 28 Exclusive Iran intervenes to prevent ousting of Iraqi prime minister sources Reuters 2019 10 31 Retrieved 2019 11 15 Mohammed Tawfeeq 2019 10 31 Iraq s prime minister agrees to resign after weeks of protests CNN Retrieved 2019 11 15 Iraqi protesters and security forces clash keep Umm Qasr port closed Reuters Reuters 2019 11 02 Three killed as Iraq protesters attack Iran consulate in Karbala Iraq News Al Jazeera 2019 11 03 via Al Jazeera Three Iraqis killed in front of Iranian consulate in Kerbala sources Reuters 2019 11 04 via www reuters com Iraq protesters attack Iran s consulate in Karbala BBC News 2019 11 04 Iraq shuts down internet again as protests intensify NetBlocks 2019 11 04 Retrieved 2019 11 04 Internet access cut off in much of Iraq NetBlocks Reuters 2019 11 04 via www reuters com Heavily censored internet briefly returns to Iraq 28 hours after nationwide blackout NetBlocks 2019 10 03 Retrieved 2019 10 03 Welle www dw com Deutsche Iraq s top cleric urges government to meet protesters demands DW COM Retrieved 2019 11 15 Iraq protests death toll rises to 319 with nearly 15 000 injured CNN CNN 2019 11 09 Retrieved 2019 11 15 Iraq Parliament to convene amid UN mediation efforts over crisis Retrieved 2019 11 15 AP Qassim Abdul Zahra Iraq officials 4 protesters killed in Baghdad clashes Washington Post Archived from the original on 2019 11 14 Retrieved 2019 11 15 4 killed in bomb attack in Iraq s Tahrir square A News Retrieved 2019 11 16 Risen James Arango Tim Fassihi Farnaz Hussain Murtaza Bergman Ronen 2019 11 18 A Spy Complex Revealed The Intercept Archived from the original on 2019 12 04 Retrieved 2019 12 25 Mamouri Ali 2019 11 20 New scandals pour more fuel on Iraq protests Al Monitor Archived from the original on 2019 11 20 Retrieved 2019 11 22 Chulov Martin 2019 11 18 Leaked cables reveal scale of Iran s influence in Iraq via www theguardian com Iraqi protesters block commercial ports split capital Ledger Enquirer Archived from the original on 2019 11 21 Retrieved 2019 11 19 At least seven killed as Iraq seeks to quell renewed violence Retrieved 2019 11 22 2 Iraqi protesters shot dead The Malaysian Insight Retrieved 2019 11 24 Alissa J Rubin Falih Hassan 2019 11 27 Iraqi Protesters Burn Down Iranian Consulate New York Times The news hub AFP com 2012 01 16 Arwa Ibrahim 2019 11 28 Bloodbath 25 Iraqi protesters killed as army deploys south Al Jazeera Iraqi prime minister to resign in wake of deadly protests Politico Associated Press 2019 11 29 Retrieved 2019 11 29 Iraqi Protesters Torch Iranian Consulate For Second Time RFE RL Iraq unrest Protesters set fire to Iranian consulate in Najaf BBC News 2019 11 28 Iraq condemns attack on Iranian consulate in Najaf www aljazeera com Kullab Samya 2019 12 07 Iraqi officials raise the toll to 25 killed in Baghdad bloodshed Associated Press Over a dozen killed in Baghdad when gunmen open fire on protesters 2019 12 06 via www theguardian com Safi Michael 2019 12 05 Pro Iran militia supporters converge on Baghdad protests via www theguardian com Tensions flare as unidentified gunmen kill protesters in Baghdad www aljazeera com The Assassination of Activist Fahim Al Tai Commemorated In Karbala Al Shahid Archived from the original on 2019 12 22 Retrieved 2019 12 10 a b c Iraq s Sadr threatens to withdraw supporters from Tahrir after teenager lynched Middle East Eye 2019 12 12 Archived from the original on 2019 12 12 Retrieved 2019 12 12 Iraq passes electoral reforms but deadlock remains Reuters Reuters 2019 12 24 Retrieved 2019 12 25 Musawy Lina 2018 06 19 Electoral Reform What s Really Needed in Iraq The Washington Institute for Near East Policy Retrieved 2020 05 06 Al Rikabi Hashim 2017 Reforming the Electoral System in Iraq PDF Report Al Bayan Center for Planning and Studies p 13 Retrieved 2020 05 06 Abdul Zahra Qassim 2019 12 24 Iraq s parliament approves new election law amid protests The Associated Press Retrieved 2020 05 06 Hassan Falih Rubin Alissa J 2019 12 24 Iraq s New Election Law Draws Much Criticism and Few Cheers The New York Times Retrieved 2020 05 06 Iraqi President Barham Saleh Submits Resignation to Parliament Amid Deadly Protests Report Time Retrieved 2019 12 26 Iraqi president threatens to quit in defiance of Iran s allies in parliament Reuters 2019 12 26 Retrieved 2019 12 26 Iraqi president submits resignation after rejecting nominee for prime minister Tehran Times 2019 12 27 a b Pro Iran protesters at US embassy in Baghdad gear up for sit in aljazeera 2019 12 31 Retrieved 2020 01 03 NRC Handelsblad 2 January 2020 Qasem Soleimani Mourners gather in Baghdad for funeral procession BBC News 2020 01 04 Retrieved 2020 01 04 O Brien Amy 2020 01 04 Thousands march in Baghdad funeral procession for Qassem Suleimani video The Guardian Retrieved 2020 01 04 Safi Michael 2020 01 04 Qassem Suleimani chants of death to America at Baghdad funeral The Guardian Retrieved 2020 01 04 Ibrahim Arwa You never let us down Thousands mourn Soleimani in Baghdad aljazeera Retrieved 2020 01 04 a b Hashd deputy leader Abu Mahdi al Muhandis buried in Iraq s Najaf aljazeera Ahmed Nabil 2020 01 06 Overshadowed By U S Iran Escalation Iraq Protesters Keep Movement Alive Radio Farda Archived from the original on 2020 01 07 Retrieved 2020 01 09 a b En Irak les manifestants anti pouvoir disent non aux occupants americain et iranien In Iraq anti government demonstrators say not to American and Iranian occupiers L Obs in French AFP 2020 01 05 Archived from the original on 2020 01 09 Retrieved 2020 01 09 Soleimani Huge crowds pack Tehran for commander s funeral BBC News BBC 2020 01 06 Mourners flood Tehran as calls for revenge over Soleimani grow Al Jazeera 2020 01 06 Mohammmed Aboulenein Aref Ahmed 2020 01 07 Thousands mourn Iran backed paramilitary linchpin in southern Iraq reuters Hashd deputy leader Abu Mahdi al Muhandis buried in Iraq s Najaf www aljazeera com Hundreds of grieving reporters were shot after reporting Iraqi protests Archyde 2020 01 11 Retrieved 2020 01 11 Hundreds mourn reporters shot dead after covering Iraq protests France 24 2020 01 11 Iraqi journalists fear for lives after Basra reporters killed www aljazeera com Iraq s security forces kill at least two protesters in Baghdad www aljazeera com Hosseini Siavosh 2020 01 21 Iraqis Continue to Protest Meddling Iranian Regime Four protesters two policemen killed as Iraq unrest resumes Reuters 2020 01 20 via www reuters com Three Iraqi protesters killed and dozens wounded as anti government unrest resumes Arab News 2020 01 20 Dozens of Iraqi Protesters Wounded as Anti Government Unrest Resumes Algemeiner com Dozens of Iraqi protesters wounded as anti government unrest resumes Middle East Eye Dozens of Iraqi protesters wounded as anti government unrest resumes The Jerusalem Post JPost com Three rockets fall near US embassy in Iraq 2020 01 20 via www theguardian com Three rockets hit near US embassy in Baghdad security sources gulfnews com At least 10 killed in two days of violent protests across Iraq www aljazeera com Mamouri Ali 2020 01 24 As Iraq s protests continue is political solution on the horizon Al Monitor 12 dead and brutal repression in last 48 hours amid ongoing crackdown on protests in Iraq new amnesty investigation finds www amnesty org 2020 01 23 Targeted killings up as 8 wounded in Iraq protest violence San Diego Union Tribune 2020 01 23 Hundreds of thousands protest US troop presence in Iraq CNN 2020 01 24 We want them out Iraq protesters call for US troops exit www aljazeera com Tawfeeq Mohammed 2020 01 24 Hundreds of thousands protest US troop presence in Iraq CNN Huge rally as Iraqis demand US troops pull out BBC News 2020 01 24 No No America Thousands of Iraqis rally against US military presence CNBC 2020 01 24 Ibrahim Arwa 2020 01 14 Sadr calls for million man march against US presence in Iraq AlJazeera Millions rally in Iraq to demand removal of U S military forces UPI 2020 01 24 Al Sudani Maher Nazih 2020 01 25 Iraqi security forces raid protest camps after Sadr supporters withdraw Reuters via www reuters com Iraqi Protest Camps Burned and Broken but Not Beaten Voice of America English www voanews com Iraq s Sadrists withdraw support for protest movement www aljazeera com US embassy in Iraq hit by rocket attack wounding at least one 2020 01 27 via www theguardian com US embassy in Iraq hit by rockets DW COM Barbara Starr Jennifer Hansler Three rockets hit US Embassy compound in Baghdad US official says CNN Mohammed Tawfeeq Raja Razek 12 dead hundreds wounded as protesters clash with Iraq security forces CNN Two Iraq protesters killed as anti government unrest persists Arab News 2020 01 27 Iraqi security forces kill protester rockets hit U S embassy Reuters 2020 01 27 via www reuters com Gebeily Maya Pompeo urges Iraq to uphold sovereignty after assaults by Iran on US targets www timesofisrael com Iraq Authorities Violently Remove Protesters Human Rights Watch 2020 01 31 Iraqi Cleric Condemns Use of Force 11 Protesters Wounded Voice of America English www voanews com Iraq names new PM after months of protests BBC News 2020 02 01 Mohammed Allawi appointed new Iraq PM protesters reject him www aljazeera com Iraq protesters unconvinced after Mohammed Allawi named PM Agence France Presse 2020 02 02 via www theguardian com Iraq protest camps splinter over cleric s backing of new PM France 24 2020 02 03 Who is cracking down on Iraq s anti government protesters www aljazeera com Rival protesters clash in Iraq as unrest continues France 24 2020 02 04 Iraqi protesters face off against cleric s followers Iraqi protesters face off against cleric s followers Iraqi protesters face off against cleric Moqtada Sadr s followers Arab News 2020 02 04 Iraqi protesters face off against cleric s followers AW Several killed after al Sadr followers storm protest camp in Iraq www aljazeera com Clashes in Iraq s Najaf kill 8 after cleric s followers storm protest camp medics Reuters 2020 02 05 via www reuters com Seven killed as rival protesters clash in Iraq s Najaf France 24 2020 02 05 Iraqi Officials At Least 6 Shot Dead in Southern Iraq The New York Times Eight killed in Iraq as cleric s followers storm protest camp Eight killed in Iraq as cleric s followers storm protest camp Sadr militia supporters kill 8 Iraqi protesters and wound dozens in Najaf reports www kurdistan24 net Iraq protesters rally in Najaf after deadly clashes with Sadrists www aljazeera com U S outraged by killing of protesters in Iraq Pompeo 2020 02 07 Iraq protesters look to al Sistani ahead of Friday sermon www aljazeera com Iraqi cleric scolds security forces after protesters die in new tensions News Middle East THE DAILY STAR The Daily Star Nearly 550 Killed in Iraq Protest Violence Commission 2020 02 07 Iraq s Grand Ayatollah Ali Al Sistani condemns deadly attacks on protesters The National 2020 02 08 Hopeful again Iraqi protesters hail Ayatollah Sistani s speech www aljazeera com Menmy Dana Taib 2020 02 13 Iraqi Kurdistan authorities decry protest suppression Al Monitor Iraq protestors cross dress to please Sadr Middle East Monitor 2020 02 11 Iraqi Officials Say Protester Shot Killed in Southern Iraq The New York Times Iraqi protester killed at university sit in 2020 02 10 a b Kurdistan24 www kurdistan24 net Iran Reopens Iraqi Consulate That Protesters Attacked IRNA Says Bloomberg com 2020 02 10 via www bloomberg com Iran reopens consulate burned by protesters Iraq Middle East Monitor 2020 02 11 Iraq cleric Sadr dissolves units accused of deadly protest attacks France 24 2020 02 11 Iraqi MP Continued protests provide opportunity for real reform 2020 02 24 Iraqi authorities reopen Baghdad bridge shut for months by protests Reuters 2020 02 12 via www reuters com Abdul Zahra Qassim Defying radical cleric Iraqi women protesters take to streets www timesofisrael com Hundreds of Iraqi women defy cleric to protest authorities France 24 2020 02 13 Women protesters in Iraq defy radical cleric take to street Egypt Independent 2020 02 14 Iraqi women defy top cleric s call to separate genders at rallies Daily Sabah 2020 02 13 Hundreds of Iraqi women challenge al Sadr s call for segregation www aljazeera com 40 Days Later Iraqis Gather At Site Of Soleimani Killing NPR org Bar el Zvi 2020 02 15 Million man Protests Threaten New Havoc in Iraq Haaretz Iraqi man tries to set himself on fire at Munich Security Conference protest DW COM Iraqi man tries to set himself on fire at Munich Security Conference protest Iraq News Local News Baghdadpost www thebaghdadpost com 2020 02 15 Iraq protesters rally for one of their own to become PM France 24 2020 02 16 Anti government protests take economic toll in Baghdad www aljazeera com UN Envoy Condemns Use of Hunting Rifles Against Iraqi Protesters Voice of America English www voanews com UN envoy condemns use of birdshot against Iraqi protesters Middle East Monitor 2020 02 18 Elbaldawi Lujain 2020 02 21 Protests bring to life a new generation in Iraq Al Monitor Iraq s southern protesters refuse to back down www aljazeera com Kurds leave talks with Iraqi PM nominee blame his attitude toward Kurdistan www kurdistan24 net Saadoun Mustafa 2020 02 25 Nasiriyah becomes the Iraqi protest capital Al Monitor Abdul Zahra Qassim Faraj Murtada Protester shot dead in fresh Iraq violence www timesofisrael com a b Iraqi officials 1 protester shot dead in fresh violence 660 NEWS www 660citynews com Iraqi Nurse Spends Her Weekends Stitching Wounds at Protest Site Asharq AL awsat Iraqi officials 1 protester shot dead in fresh violence Secretary Pompeo s Call with Iraqi Prime Minister Designate Allawi www miragenews com 2020 02 24 Wearing Masks Iraqis Protest against the Parliament Asharq AL awsat Iraq parliament postpones vote on new government Middle East Monitor 2020 02 25 Mamouri Ali 2020 02 26 Confidence vote first of many challenges ahead of Iraq s PM designate Al Monitor Iraq parliament delays vote on a new government over lack of quorum state media morungexpress com morungexpress com Iraq Parliament postpones vote on new Cabinet after weeks of jockeying The National 2020 02 27 Iraq PM designate renounces British nationality ahead of parliament vote alaraby 2020 02 27 Iraq files complaint against PM designate over bribery allegations Middle East Monitor 2020 02 27 Uncertainty looms as Iraqi PM designate Allawi steps down www aljazeera com Iraq s Allawi bows out as PM designate rockets hit Green Zone The Jakarta Post Iraq s PM designate Allawi steps down Middle East Monitor 2020 03 02 Iraq power vacuum after PM designate withdraws BBC News 2020 03 02 Iraq s Prime Minister designate Mohammed Allawi withdraws from race DW 01 03 2020 DW COM Iraq Power Vacuum Acting PM Steps Aside After Designated Successor Quits The New York Times Iraq Two rockets hit Green Zone in Baghdad DW 01 03 2020 DW COM Laessing Ulf 2020 03 01 Iraqi prime minister candidate Allawi quits as vacuum looms Reuters via www reuters com UN Envoy Warns Iraq Is Being Pushed Into the Unknown The New York Times Iraq s angry protesters returns to the streets Middle East Monitor 2020 03 06 Iraq security forces injure protesters in Baghdad Middle East Monitor 2020 03 09 Iraq 2 activists assassinated in Maysan province Middle East Monitor 2020 03 11 Iraq 2 activists assassinated in Maysan province www aa com tr Iraqi President Salih appoints Adnan al Zurfi as new PM designate www aljazeera com Iraq s president tasks Adnan al Zurfi with forming a new government Middle East Eye New Iraq PM designate to break deadlock BBC News 2020 03 17 Adnan al Zurfi named new prime minister of Iraq UPI Bumpy Road for New Iraqi Prime Minister Designate Voice of America English www voanews com Exclusive 3D reconstruction shows Iraqi security forces deliberately killed protesters www amnesty org 2020 03 17 Evidence Shows Iraqi Security Forces Shot To Kill Protesters In Baghdad Rights Group UrduPoint Iraqi Forces Deliberately Killed Protesters with Gas Grenades 2020 03 17 Coronavirus Brings Abrupt End to Iraq Protest Movement Asharq AL awsat Arab The New 2020 03 29 Iraqi demonstrators strategically rotate to maintain anti government protests amid coronavirus lockdown alaraby Elbaldawi Lujain 2020 04 01 Iraqi government calls on civil society to fight COVID 19 Al Monitor Iraq Protesters Confront Security Forces as PM designate Presents Agenda to Parliament Voice of America English www voanews com MP says Iraqi PM designate Zurfi will be replaced within hours Iraq News Local News Baghdadpost www thebaghdadpost com 2020 04 05 Kittleson Shelly 2020 04 06 Coronavirus curfew fails to clear Iraqi protest squares Al Monitor Rockets target US oil company site in southern Iraq www aljazeera com Missiles target US oil company in Iraq s Basra Middle East Monitor 2020 04 07 Rockets Land near US Oil Service Compound in Iraq s Basra Asharq AL awsat Five missiles fired at American oil company in Iraq Iranian media The Jerusalem Post JPost com US announces strategic dialogue with Iraq www kurdistan24 net Harris Bryant 2020 04 07 Intel US Iraq to meet on American troop presence Al Monitor US asks Iraq to negotiate new trade security agreement as tensions rise The Jerusalem Post JPost com Iraq names third PM designate in 10 weeks BBC News 2020 04 09 Iraq s intelligence chief nominated to prime minister DW 09 04 2020 DW COM Iraq PM designate resigns intelligence chief named new candidate Middle East Monitor 2020 04 09 Iraq s head of intelligence named third PM designate this year www aljazeera com Iraq Appoints Third PM Designate After Second Withdraws Voice of America English www voanews com Kurdish leaders publicly wish success for Iraq s new PM designate www kurdistan24 net Arab The New 2020 04 10 The Iraq Report Can new PM designate Kadhimi unite Iraq s fractured political scene alaraby Could it be third time lucky in Iraq with new PM designate www aljazeera com Iraq s Kadhimi Takes First Step to Form New Government Asharq AL awsat Staff Al Monitor 2020 04 12 Iraqi PM designate meets with officials in push to form government that serves the public Al Monitor Turkey bombs refugees in Iraq amid coronavirus pandemic The Jerusalem Post JPost com Iraq accuses Turkey of violating airspace and bombing refugee camp 2020 04 16 Iraq summons Turkish ambassador after attack on refugee camp 2020 04 16 Iraqi protester shot dead in Baghdad several wounded Reports www aljazeera com Staff Al Monitor 2020 04 21 Iraq relaxes coronavirus restrictions ahead of Ramadan Al Monitor Arab The New 2020 04 22 Protesters face live fire after Iraq partially lifts coronavirus lockdown alaraby Ahead of Ramadan Iraq eases some coronavirus restrictions The Jerusalem Post JPost com Iraq eases some lockdown restrictions ahead of Ramadan Reuters 2020 04 21 via www reuters com Iraq Eases Some Lockdown Restrictions Ahead of Ramadan Asharq AL awsat Iraqi Parliament Approves PM Mustafa al Kadhimi s New Cabinet Voice of America English www voanews com Mamouri Ali 2020 05 07 Iraq s parliament approves government of new PM Kadhimi Al Monitor Mustafa al Kadhimi voted in as Iraq s prime minister www kurdistan24 net Iraqi Parliament confirms Mustafa Al Kadhimi as new Prime Minister The National 2020 05 07 Rubin Alissa J 2020 05 06 Iraq Chooses New Prime Minister an Ex Intelligence Chief Backed by U S The New York Times Iraq forms new government after six months of uncertainty www aljazeera com Iraq lawmakers approve government of Prime Minister designate Kadhimi Reuters 2020 05 07 via www reuters com Iraqi PM Al Kadhimi calls on govt to meet peoples demands Arab News 2020 05 09 Iraqi PM highlights priority of holding fair parliamentary elections Xinhua English news cn www xinhuanet com Archived from the original on 2020 05 30 New Iraqi Cabinet holds its first meeting 2020 05 09 Newly Appointed Iraqi PM Meets with US and Iran Ambassadors Voice of America English www voanews com Iraq s al Kadhimi We will release protest detainees except those linked to killings Al Arabiya English 2020 05 09 Hundreds gather in Baghdad in new round of anti gov t protests www aljazeera com Thousands restart anti government protests in Iraq Middle East Monitor 2020 05 11 Services Compiled from Wire 2020 05 10 Iraqi protesters return to streets as deadlock persists Daily Sabah Protests resume in Iraq as PM Kadhimi pledges reform www kurdistan24 net Iraq Basra protesters call for resignation of local governor www aljazeera com New Iraq PM releases protesters promotes respected general www aljazeera com New Iraq PM releases protesters promotes respected general The Washington Post Archived from the original on 2020 05 14 New Iraqi PM Orders Jailed Protesters Freed Voice of America English www voanews com Iraq security forces arrest armed men after protester killed Arab News 2020 05 11 Staff Al Monitor 2020 05 11 Iraq arrests pro Iran militiamen accused of killing protester Al Monitor Trump congratulates Iraq PM Kadhimi on forming government Reuters 2020 05 12 via www reuters com Staff Al Monitor 2020 05 12 Intel Trump congratulates Iraq s new Prime Minister Mustafa al Kadhimi Al Monitor Donald Trump congratulates new Iraqi Prime Minister www kurdistan24 net Agency, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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