Exclusive: Iran-backed militias deployed snipers in Iraq protests -
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[October 17, 2019]
(Reuters) - Iran-backed militias
deployed snipers on Baghdad rooftops during Iraq's deadliest
anti-government protests in years, two Iraqi security officials told
Reuters.
The deployment of militia fighters, which has not been previously
reported, underscores the chaotic nature of Iraqi politics amid mass
protests that led to more than 100 deaths and 6,000 injuries during the
week starting Oct. 1. Such militias have become a fixture here with
Iran's rising influence. They sometimes operate in conjunction with
Iraqi security forces but they retain their own command structures.
The Iraqi security sources told Reuters that the leaders of Iran-aligned
militias decided on their own to help put down the mass protests against
the government of Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi, whose
one-year-old administration is backed by powerful Iran-backed armed
groups and political factions.
“We have confirmed evidence that the snipers were elements of militias
reporting directly to their commander instead of the chief commander of
the armed forces,” said one of the Iraqi security sources. “They belong
to a group that is very close to the Iranians.”
A second Iraqi security source, who attended daily government security
briefings, said militia men clad in black shot protesters on the third
day of unrest, when the death toll soared to more than 50 from about
half a dozen. The fighters were directed by Abu Zainab al-Lami, head of
security for the Hashid, a grouping of mostly Shi’ite Muslim
paramilitaries backed by Iran, the second source said. The Hashid leader
was tasked with quashing the protests by a group of other senior militia
commanders, the source said. The sources did not say how many snipers
were deployed by militia groups.
A spokesman for the Hashid, Ahmed al-Asadi, denied the groups took part
in the crackdown. “No members were present in the protest areas. None of
the elements of the Hashid took part in confronting protesters,” Asadi
said in a statement to Reuters.
Iraqi Interior Ministry spokesman Saad Maan said state security forces
did not fire directly at protesters and blamed unnamed “vicious”
shooters for the mass deaths and injuries. The government has opened an
investigation to determine who shot the protesters and who ordered it,
Maan said in a news conference on Oct. 6.
The assertion that security forces did not participate in the violence
seemed to contradict a statement on Oct. 7 from the Iraqi security
forces which said excessive force had been used and promised to hold
individuals accountable for violence against civilians.
An official with the prime minister’s office said in a statement to
Reuters Wednesday that it would be “premature to lay the blame on any
parties, whether from Hashid or other security forces, before we end the
investigation. Let’s wait and see who gave the order ‘shoot to kill.’”
Mohammed Ridha, the head of parliament's security and defense committee,
said in statement on Thursday that an initial investigation showed there
were "deliberate killings of protesters by some elements", without
elaborating.
Iran’s role in responding to the demonstrations was another reminder of
Tehran’s reach in Iraq, where a sizable number of former militia
commanders are now members of parliament and support the Iranian agenda.
Stability of the Iraqi government is in the best interests of Iran,
which has been steadily amassing influence in Iraq since 2003, when the
U.S.-led invasion toppled the Islamic Republic’s arch-enemy Saddam
Hussein. Iran is Iraq’s biggest trading partner.
Iran's delegation to the United Nations did not immediately respond
Wednesday afternoon to questions from Reuters about its support of
militias and their involvement in the violence against protesters.
Leaders of militias in Iraq have denied getting training and weapons
from Iran.
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Demonstrators gather during a protest after the lifting of the
curfew, following four days of nationwide anti-government protests
that turned violent, in Baghdad, Iraq October 5, 2019. REUTERS/Thaier
Al-Sudani/File Photo
SNIPERS ON ROOFTOPS
As protests entered their third day, on Oct. 3, snipers appeared on
Baghdad rooftops. A Reuters cameraman who was covering the unrest
near Baghdad’s Tahrir Square that afternoon said he saw a sniper,
wearing a balaclava and dressed in black as he stood on top of an
under-construction building that overlooked the demonstrations.
Protesters fled as the sniper opened fire. One protester who was
shot in the head was carried away in a large crowd. Another who was
shot in the head appeared to have died and was rushed off in a
truck. When his phone rang, a friend recognized that the man’s
brother was calling.
“Don’t tell him he died,” the friend said.
The protests started Oct. 1 amid public rage over chronic shortages
of jobs, electricity and clean water. Iraqis blame politicians and
officials for systemic corruption that has prevented Iraq from
recovering after years of sectarian violence and a devastating war
to defeat Islamic State.
Any vacuum of power could prove challenging for the region, given
that Baghdad is an ally of both the United States and Iran, who are
locked in their own political standoff. Thousands of U.S. troops are
stationed in the country in positions not far from those of
Iran-backed Shi’ite militias.
The second security source told Reuters that the snipers were using
radio communications equipment that was provided by Iran and is
difficult to intercept, giving the groups an essentially private
network.
A group of senior commanders from Iran’s Revolutionary Guards
traveled to Iraq on the second day of the protests and met with
Iraqi intelligence and security officials, according to a diplomat
in the region familiar with Iran’s decision-making process. After
the meeting, senior Revolutionary Guard officers with experience in
curbing civil unrest continued to advise the Iraqi government, the
diplomat said, although no Iranian soldiers were deployed.
A senior commander of one of the Iran-backed militias - who said his
group was not involved in efforts to stop the protests or the
resulting violence - said Tehran consulted closely with forces
trying to quell the demonstrations.
“After two days, they jumped in and supplied the government and
militias with intelligence,” the militia leader told Reuters.
“Iranian advisors insisted on having a role and warned us that the
ongoing protests, if not reversed, will undermine the government of
Abdul Mahdi.”
(Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Brian Thevenot and Toby
Chopra)
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