World, Middle East

Deaths reported as Iraqi forces disperse Karbala sit-in

More than 100 people killed, 3,600 others injured since second wave of protests began on Friday

Hussein al-Amir  | 29.10.2019 - Update : 29.10.2019
Deaths reported as Iraqi forces disperse Karbala sit-in

KARBALA, Iraq

Iraqi security forces dispersed a protest camp in the southern city of Karbala early Tuesday, amid conflicting reports about the death toll.

Ali al-Bayati, a member of the High Commission for Human Rights, said 18 people were killed and 800 others injured in the dispersal.

Local media, however, put the death toll at 20 and hundreds injured.

A local security source said anti-riot police moved to disperse "an unlicensed sit-in" in central Karbala.

He said protesters ignored calls by security forces to end their sit-in.

Gaafar al-Saadi, an eyewitness, said hundreds of masked gunmen attacked the sit-in in central Karbala.

"They opened fire randomly while police vehicles rammed into protesters, leaving at least ten people dead," he told Anadolu Agency.

Alaa al-Sherifi, another witness, said ambulances were unable to move the injured in the first hours of the dispersal "due to heavy fire by security forces".

"This attack by security forces was totally unjustified," he said.

The army's Middle Euphrates Operations Command, however, denied the death of any protesters in the break-up.

"The situation is very good in Karbala," commander Ali al-Hashemi said.

"There is no singly martyr in Karbala," he said, adding that a number of people were only injured, mostly from security forces.

More than 100 people have been killed and more than 3,600 others injured since a second wave of protests began in several Iraqi provinces on Friday, according to human rights groups.

The first wave of protests in early October left 149 protesters and eight security personnel dead.

Anger has been building in Iraq in recent years due to rising unemployment and rampant corruption. Many people in the country have limited access to basic services such as electricity and clean water.

According to World Bank figures, Iraq's youth unemployment is around 25%. It is also ranked the 12th most-corrupt country in the world by several transparency organizations.

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