Protesters in Basra against PM designate Allawi (Al Mirbad) |
The naming of former Communications Minister Mohammed Allawi as the designate premier and the return of the Sadrists to the protest squares has led to new conflicts.
First, Mohammed Allawi was officially named as the designate
prime minister on February 1. He called for a continuation of the protests
to keep the pressure on the ruling parties to carry out reforms, and promised
to hold those responsible for the deaths of demonstrators accountable.
He was not well received by the street however as every major city in the south
and Baghdad held marches against his appointment. Since he was made premier via
a deal between Moqtada al-Sadr’s Sairoon and Badr’s Hadi Amiri’s Fatah the
protests consider Allawi part of the establishment when they want new faces to
rule the country. Dealing with the demonstrations will be one of Allawi’s
toughest and most important jobs.
The second problem arose when Sadr’s followers returned to
Baghdad’s Tahrir Square. On January
31, the first day they came back there were small skirmishes between
protesters and Sadrists. Then the Sadrists took over the Turkish
Restaurant building, which overlooks the square, while getting into fights
with those that opposed Allawi becoming the new leader. Sadr
abandoned the protests for a deal with Iran, but when that fell apart he
called for his people to go back to the sit-in sites. Rather than apologize for
his flip flop it appears that he wants to impose his agenda upon the
demonstrations. There’s the added twist that the Sadr movement split
as well with some never having left the sit-ins. This could be a major
crisis for the demonstrations if they have to face internal divisions while
dealing with the constant attacks of the army, police and Hashd.
SOURCES
Abdul-Zahra, Qassim and Kullab, Samya, “Iraqi blocs select
new PM designate after weeks of jockeying,” Associated Press, 2/1/20
Al Ghad Press, “Groups of the Sadrist movement suppress a
rally rejecting Mohammed Allawi’s assignment in Tahrir Square,” 2/1/20
Al Hurra, “Allawi pledges to confine arms to the state and
hold the protesters’ killers accountable,” 2/1/20
- “Coinciding with Allawi’s announcement .. Sadr supporters
control the Turkish restaurant,” 2/1/20
- “Independent in manner of Abdul Mahdi .. Who is the
designated Prime Minister of Iraq?” 2/1/20
Al Mirbad, “Burning tires in Al-Mutanabi Square, Al-Kut, to
protest Allawi’s assignment,” 2/1/20
- “Blocked the intersections in the center of Diwaniya to
protest Allawi,” 2/1/20
- “A march in the Karbala sit-in square rejects Allawi,”
2/1/20
- “Marches in Basra and Karbala refuse to assign Allawi to
head the government,” 2/1/20
- “A position on Basra sit-in on Allawi’s mandate,” 2/1/20
- “Protesters block bridges in Dhi Qar, refusing to assign
Allawi,” 2/1/20
- “Refusing to assign Allawi … Protesters cut the road to
Diwnaiya-Najaf,” 2/1/20
- “A statement by Wasit protesters: Allawi is flatly rejected
by us,” 2/1/20
- “With slogans, a demonstration in Samawa refused to
nominate Mohammed Allawi,” 2/1/20
3 comments:
All this more confirmation of my "Sadr is a coward" theory!!!
Also I seem to remember he was addicted to video games back in the post invasion days?
Which political party does this new PM come from Joel?
The video game kid theory was big in 03-04 but I'm not sure how true it was.
The new PM is an independent which mean she'll be in the same hole that Abdul Mahdi found himself in with no political backing and powerless vs the ruling parties.
Never seen any evidence that Sadre has much of an intellect. Why else would he hide in Iran?
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