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| After a spike in deaths last week, Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi said on Friday he would submit his resignation to parliament (AFP Photo/AHMAD AL-RUBAYE) |
Baghdad (AFP)
- The government of Iraq's Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi ended Sunday after
two months of violent unrest that has left more than 420 people dead and
thousands mourning them in nationwide marches.
As
anti-government demonstrators across the strife-torn country massed to honour
the fallen activists, parliament met to accept the resignation which the
77-year-old had offered two days before.
While Abdel
Mahdi stays on initially to lead a caretaker government, President Barham Saleh
will now be asked to name a successor to face the challenge of resolving the
political chaos that has engulfed the nation.
The protest
movement is Iraq's biggest since the US-led invasion of 2003 toppled Saddam
Hussein and installed a democratic system in the oil-rich but poverty-plagued
nation.
Tens of
thousands have vented their anger at a governing class they despise as inept,
corrupt and beholden to foreign powers, especially neighbouring Iran, whose
consulate in the city of Najaf was torched last Wednesday.
The rallies
spread Sunday from the protest epicentre in Baghdad and the mostly Shiite south
to the northern, majority-Sunni city of Mosul, where hundreds of students
dressed in black organised a mourning march.
Some
protesters cautiously welcomed the departure of the premier, who came to power
just a year ago based on a shaky alliance between rival parties, but they
demanded far more deep-rooted change.
"Abdel
Mahdi should go -- and so should parliament and the political parties and
Iran!" said one young demonstrator in the capital.
'Carnival
goes on'
Observers
said Iraq's fractured political scene will struggle to reach a consensus on a
new premier.
With the
parliament's main Shiite blocs "fragmented, no 'largest faction
exists," wrote Dlawer Ala'Aldeen, president of the Arbil-based Middle East
Research Institute.
Even if
they agreed on a candidate, he or she would also need the backing of the
emboldened street.
"Demonstrators
are hard to please," said Ala'Aldeen. "The carnival goes on and,
meanwhile, violence continues."
Just before
the parliamentary session began, another protester was shot dead in the
capital, medical sources said.
But, in a
victory for the movement, an Iraqi court sentenced a police officer to death
after convicting him of killing demonstrators, the first such sentence in the
two months of deadly civil unrest.
The Kut
criminal court sentenced the police major to be hanged and it jailed a police
lieutenant colonel for seven years over the deaths of seven protesters in the
southern city on November 2, judicial sources said.
In Mosul,
meanwhile, protesters were marching in solidarity with activists elsewhere in
the country.
"It's
the least Mosul can give to the martyrs," said Zahraa Ahmed, a dentistry
student.
"The
protesters are asking for their basic rights so the government should have
answered from the beginning."
Previously,
most Sunni-majority areas had refrained from protesting, fearing that opposing
the central government would earn them the labels of being
"terrorists" or supporters of Saddam.
For three
years, Mosul was the heart of the Islamic State group's ultra-conservative
"caliphate", and much of it still lies in ruins today.
Another
student in Mosul, Hussein Kheder, carrying an Iraqi flag, said the whole
country was now in agreement politically and that "now the government
needs to heed the protesters' demands".
'Nobody
objected'
Abdel Mahdi
had resisted protesters' calls for him to step down over the past two months.
But a
crackdown turned the tide this week when more than 20 people were killed in the
Shiite shrine city of Najaf, 40 in the hotspot of Nasiriyah and three in
Baghdad.
The
bloodshed prompted Iraq's influential Shiite spiritual leader, Grand Ayatollah
Ali Sistani, to call on parliament to drop its support for the premier.
Iraq's
constitution has no provision for the resignation of a premier, and lawmaker
Sarkawt Shamsaddin said Sunday that the body did not actually hold a vote.
"The
speaker said that the Federal Court was consulted and the understanding is that
(there is) no need to vote," he said.
The speaker
had then asked if any lawmaker was against the resignation and "nobody
objected".
Meanwhile,
mourners also marched for the first time in Salaheddin, a Sunni-majority
province north of Baghdad.
Eight
Shiite-majority provinces also announced a day of mourning during which government
offices would remain shut.
Clashes
have continued in Najaf, where armed men in civilian clothes have fired on
protesters who had torched part of a shrine where a revered religious figure is
buried.
Local
tribes, still tremendously influential in Iraq's south, tried to mediate a
solution.




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