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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, December 13, 2015
Iraqi Shia militas protest against Turkey's troop deployment



Suadad al-Salhy-Saturday 12 December 2015
The
demonstrators gathered in central Baghdad’s Tahrir Square wearing
military uniforms and black suits. Throngs of women wearing the
traditional abaya had put yellow scarves around their shoulders and
waved yellow flags adorned with green graphics – a reference to the
prominent Shiite militia Kataib Huzballa-Iraq. Other groups displayed a
white flag that symbolizes another Shia militia - Asaib Ahl al-Haq. Many
other demonstrators simply raised Iraqi flags and banners that read,
"Erdogan, the thief of the neighbors' wealth" and "our sovereignty is
our dignity".
The demonstrations were primarily organised and participated by Shia armed factions linked to Iran
The protesters chanted: "With our soles, with our blood we will protect you Iraq" (MEE/Hadeer al-Sayeid)
Suadad al-Salhy-Saturday 12 December 2015
BAGHDAD - Thousands of
mostly Shia paramilitary fighters took to the streets in Baghdad on
Saturday to protest Turkey’s military deployment in northern Iraq and
demanded its immediate withdrawal.
The
demonstrators gathered in central Baghdad’s Tahrir Square wearing
military uniforms and black suits. Throngs of women wearing the
traditional abaya had put yellow scarves around their shoulders and
waved yellow flags adorned with green graphics – a reference to the
prominent Shiite militia Kataib Huzballa-Iraq. Other groups displayed a
white flag that symbolizes another Shia militia - Asaib Ahl al-Haq. Many
other demonstrators simply raised Iraqi flags and banners that read,
"Erdogan, the thief of the neighbors' wealth" and "our sovereignty is
our dignity".
The demonstrators chanted: "With our soles, with our blood we will protect you Iraq."
"This (demonstration) is a message for the government. The Iraqi people
are able to protect their lands and maintain their sovereignty," Hussien
al-Saadi, a Shiite commander told Middle East Eye while waving a small
Iraqi flag.
Turkey deployed around 600 heavily armed troops last Thursday to a camp
in Ba'ashiqa, a town near IS-controlled Mosul. The government of Iraq
considered this action as a "violation of sovereignty" and has asked the
Turkish authorities for an "immediate withdrawal" from the Iraqi soil.
Turkey's President Tayyip Erdogan shot back at a press conference that
his troops were sent to northern Iraq to train Kurdish forces and that a
withdrawal is "out of the question for the moment".
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi delivered a televised speech on
Friday, saying "Iraq…is being subjected to a flagrant violation of its
sovereignty by a neighboring state (Turkey), so we have a right and a
commitment to practice all the procedures to maintain its sovereignty
and the unity of its soil". Abadi stressed in his speech that the
Turkish "armed force" were "forcibly" deployed in northern Mosul.
Saturday's demonstrations were primarily organised and participated by
Shia armed factions linked to Iran, including Badr, Asaib Ahl al-Haq,
Kataib Huzballah and other small groups. Most of the commanders and
political leaders of the participated groups are followers of the senior
Iraqi Shia hardline cleric, Kadhim al-Haieri, who has been based in
Iran since the 1970s.
"Being involved in battling Daiesh (another term for the Islamic State
group) does not mean that we are not able to fight on another front. We
fought the Americans before and we do not mind fighting the Turks this
time," according to a fighter within the state-sponsored Shia-dominated
Popular Mobilisation Force.
Shia militias linked to Iran make up the backbone of the Popular
Mobilisation Force, a body established by the Iraqi government as an
umbrella group for several sects and armed factions to combat against
Islamic State (IS) militants.
"This our last peaceful message to Erdogan, if his troops do not leave
northern Iraq, our fighters' hands will reach them," Abu Talib
al-Saiedi, a commander of Kataib Huzballah-Iraq militia told MEE.
"We as Kataib Huzballah-Iraq say if you (the Turks) do not listen to
this demonstration, we will force you to hear the voice of our rifle and
IEDs," al-Saiedi added.
The Islamic State group seized more than a third of the Iraqi
territories in the northern and western parts of the country last year,
but Iraqi security forces and Kurdish Peshmerga backed by the Shia
militias and the US-led coalition air strikes have gained back control,
including the provinces of Salahudeen in northern Baghdad and Anbar in
western Baghdad.
Iraq’s government on Friday forwarded a complaint to the UN Security
Council after a Turkish delegation arrived in Baghdad to "discuss the
repercussions of the recent crisis" between the two countries, but left
without giving any guarantees that Turkey will pull out its troops,
Iraqi officials said.
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, one of the most prominent Shia cleric in Iraq
said on Friday that the government is responsible for protecting the
country’s sovereignty. He urged people to show restraint towards foreign
residents in Iraq.
"The Iraqi government is responsible for protecting Iraq's sovereignty
and must not tolerate and side that infringes upon on it, whatever the
justifications and necessities," Sheikh Abdul al-Mehdi al-Karbala'i, one
of Sistani's representatives, said during the Friday prayer.
Iraqi Shiite militias including Badr, Kataib and Asaib have threatened to target all Turkish interests and citizens in Iraq.
"You are not stronger than the Americans," Hadi al-Aamiri, the prominent
Shia leader and the head of Badr Shia militia, said to Turkish leaders
in a televised ceremony last week:
"The Americans were forced to leave and you will be forced, too,” he added.
