Three demonstrators killed in Iraq's Karbala

Iraqi security forces opened fire on a crowd of demonstrators trying to break into the Iranian regime’s consulate in the city of Kerbala overnight, killing three, security and medical sources said on Monday (November 4).

Burning tires and chanting “Iran out, Kerbala remains free,” the crowd assembled in front of the consulate late on Sunday.

“We came here today to revolt and hold a protest in front of the Iranian consulate. We came to pull down the Iranian flag and lift the Iraqi flag instead,” said one protester in Kerbala who refused to be identified.

Iraq’s official human rights watchdog confirmed the deaths. The Iraqi High Commission for Human Rights (IHCHR) said three people were killed due to bullet wounds. A dozen were injured, including security forces, it said.

The IHCHR said the crowd tried to break into the consulate. Security sources said they tried to set fire to it.

Video posted on social media showed demonstrators ripping up a picture of Ayatollah Khomeini in a main street in al-Diwaniyah city.

On Monday thousands of anti-government protesters had gathered in central Baghdad, defying the prime minister’s plea to end protests which he says are costing Iraq’s economy billions of dollars and disrupting daily life.

The protests have broken nearly two years of relative stability in Iraq since they started on Oct. 1 in Baghdad and spread to the impoverished southern Shi’ite heartland. More than 250 people have been killed.

Despite the country’s oil wealth, many people live in poverty with limited access to clean water, electricity, healthcare or education.

“The youth have lived through economic hardships, explosions, oppression. We want to root out this political elite completely. We want to get rid of this gang, then maybe we can rest,” said a protester who did not wish to be identified. He had camped overnight in Baghdad’s Tahrir Square.

The anger over economic hardship and corruption is aimed at the sectarian power-sharing system of governance introduced in Iraq after 2003 and the political elites benefiting from it.

The political class is seen by many as subservient to one or other of Baghdad’s main allies, the United States and Iran, who use Iraq as a proxy in a struggle for regional influence.

“The Iranians and the parties affiliated with Iran harm us. We will never let any Iranian stay in Kerbala. We will not let any lackeys stay in Kerbala,” the Kerbala protester said.

“No Iranian will remain in Kerbala or across Iraq.”

Based on Reuters

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