Clashes in Iraq's Basra kill four as crisis flares in oil-rich south
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[September 01, 2022]
By John Davison
BAGHDAD (Reuters) -Clashes among rival
Shi'ite Muslim militants in the Iraqi city of Basra have killed at least
four people, security officials said on Thursday, as violence from a
worsening political crisis hit the south of the country.
The unrest began with two days of intense street fighting in Baghdad
earlier in the week, the worst the Iraqi capital has seen for years.
The crisis amounts to a power struggle between the powerful Shi'ite
cleric Moqtada al-Sadr and mostly Iran-aligned Shi'ite parties and
paramilitary groups.
Both sides have tried to exert their control over formation of a new
government since an election in October. The battle began with political
moves in parliament and the judiciary, went to the streets as Sadr
withdrew from the political process and staged protests during the
summer, and then degenerated into violence at the end of August.
It has left Iraq, which is still reeling from years of war, sanctions,
civil strife and corruption, without a government for the longest period
since the 2003 U.S. invasion which toppled Sunni dictator Saddam
Hussein.
The violence has centred on Baghdad and the south, areas dominated by
Iraq's Shi'ite majority which has ruled the country since Saddam's
regime was swept away.
"The security situation in Basra is really bad, and could escalate," one
of the security officials said. He spoke on condition of anonymity
because he is not authorised to give statements to the media.
Both security officials in Basra, Iraq's main oil-producing hub, said
the deadliest clashes took place overnight in the centre of the city.
Two of those killed were members of Sadr's Peace Brigades militia, they
said.
On Thursday morning, gunmen attacked government buildings in Basra where
security forces and paramilitary groups with links to Iran are
stationed.
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A man walks past a damaged vehicle on a
street aftermath of clashes among rival Shiite Muslim militants in
Basra, Iraq September 1, 2022. REUTERS/Essam al-Sudani
The officials could not immediately identify the gunmen firing on
the government buildings, but said they believed they were Sadr
supporters.
The leader of one Iran-backed militia group and one of Sadr's main
Shi'ite rivals, Qais al-Khazali, said in a statement that he was
ordering all offices of his group closed, and warned against
attempts to attack them, without elaborating.
In Baghdad on Monday and Tuesday, armed supporters of Sadr fought
with security forces and Iran-aligned gunmen in clashes that broke
out hours after Sadr announced his full withdrawal from political
life.
After Sadr's announcement his followers, who had until then been
staging a peaceful sit-in at the parliament, began storming other
government buildings and were shot at. His militiamen retaliated and
the clashes began.
Sadr called for calm in Baghdad on Tuesday and the violence promptly
subsided.
But the obstacles to peace remain. Sadr is calling for a dissolution
of parliament and new elections, and some of his rivals insist on
the formation of a government.
(Reporting by John Davison and Baghdad Newsroom, editing by Mark
Heinrich and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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