Iraqi Security: We spotted infiltrators among the demonstrators

Iraqi Security: We spotted infiltrators among the demonstrators

The security forces made it obvious that they had seen some invaders as protestors continued to swarm the squares in Baghdad today, Saturday, and there were some minor skirmishes between security and a few protesters.
According to a statement from the Security Media Cell, the security forces deal with the protesters in a highly professional and peaceful manner without using any force or carrying weapons.

However, it supported the observation of individuals who infiltrated the protesters and attacked security forces with Molotov cocktails, hunting rifles, and ammunition.
She wrote to the people in charge of organising these protests, requesting that they turn over “the intruders quickly, maintain the peaceful movement, and prevent abuse.”

The security forces used some sound bombs to scatter the protestors who attempted to cross the concrete barriers leading to the strongly protected Green Zone, according to an Al-Arabiya/Al-Hadath correspondent.
To mark the third anniversary of the significant and unprecedented uprising against authority, the corrupting influence of the ruling class, and the poor management of public services in a nation experiencing total political paralysis, thousands of protesters gathered in Baghdad.

As they gathered in the iconic Tahrir Square to remember, the protestors, who were primarily young people, also chanted against politicians and militias while holding up Iraqi flags and images of the 2019 dead.
In order to restrict entry to the Green Zone, which is home to Western embassies and government institutions, they also congregated at the entrance to the Jumhuriya Bridge. This bridge was blocked off by three concrete blocks placed by security personnel.

It is significant that nationwide protests broke out in October 2019—particularly in the south’s impoverished governorates. And it lasted for several months in the oil-rich nation. During that time, hundreds of thousands of protesters set up camp in Tahrir Square and called for an end to corruption, the expansion of unemployment, the failure of the infrastructure, the absence of democracy, and other issues.

However, the Covid pandemic’s constraints and the violence that has left nearly 600 people dead and 30,000 injured have sapped its momentum.
But three years later, little has altered in Iraq. The political scene is still paralysed, and the mood is tense.

Muqtada al-Sadr and the coordination framework, the two main political rivals, are at odds over the choice of a new prime minister and the potential for early legislative elections.
The important Shiite leader Muqtada al-Sadr wants the coordinating framework, which includes pro-Iranian factions, to form a government before any elections, but his opponent wants it to happen right away.

Iraqi Security: We discovered spies among the protesters.

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