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November 22, 2008 Saturday Ziqa'ad 23, 1429



Iraqis come out against pact on stay of US troops


BAGHDAD, Nov 21: Followers of Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr marched on Friday against a pact letting US forces stay in Iraq until 2011, toppling an effigy of President George W. Bush where US troops once tore down a statue of Saddam Hussein.

Thousands of demonstrators chanted and waved Iraqi flags in Baghdad’s Firdos square, where US forces pulled down a statue of the ousted Iraqi dictator when they took the city in 2003.

The pact, approved by both governments and now being debated rancorously in the Iraqi parliament, requires US troops to leave the streets of Iraqi towns by the middle of next year and to leave the country by Dec 31, 2011.

US forces will need Iraqi warrants to arrest people, and US contractors will be subjected to Iraqi law.

Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki obtained important concessions from the United States in months of gruelling negotiations, and has ridiculed the Sadrists for demanding a firm date for a US withdrawal, only to oppose it when he delivered it in the pact.

While the Sadrists have not made clear what their practical alternative to the pact is, they say US troops should leave Iraq immediately, not in three years. They also say they doubt the Americans will stick to the agreed timetable.

Bush had long opposed setting a deadline. His elected successor, Democrat Barack Obama, says he will withdraw combat forces within 16 months of taking office in January.

In Firdos Square, the Sadrist protesters erected an effigy of the outgoing US president, carrying a briefcase with the words “The pact of subservience and shame”. They hurled bottles at the effigy, toppled it, tore it to pieces and set it on fire.

“I am with you in evicting the occupier any way you see fit,” a white-turbaned cleric read out to the demonstrators in a message from Sadr, to shouts of “God is Great” from the crowd.

‘NEVER, NEVER’: Sadr’s supporters have staged several violent uprisings since 2003.

With Iraqi army snipers peering down from the rooftops, the protesters knelt in prayer, then set off on a march chanting “Never, never to the pact”.

“I obey Sadr’s orders to reject this degrading and humiliating pact,” said Abu Zainab, 36, a casual labourer from Baghdad’s Sadr City slum. “The pact was born dead because the occupation forces will not withdraw at the agreed times.”

The office of Baghdad security spokesman Major-General Qasim Moussawi said the protest took place without violent incident.

Members of the Sadrist parliamentary bloc joined the march.

Senior Sadr aide Hazim al-Araji said: “Today is the day of Iraqi unity among Arabs, Kurds, all communities of Iraq, to reject the security pact. These people are coming out to prove the security pact is worthless.”

While Sadr’s followers oppose the pact outright, other groups have expressed reservations about some details.

The Iraqi government signed the accord this week and parliament is expected to vote on it next week.

“I call upon all the blocs in the parliament to be committed to the oath they took to keep Iraq sovereign and independent,” Sadrist lawmaker Falah Shanshal said. “We are hopeful Iraqi parliamentarians won’t vote for the pact.”

Maliki launched a crackdown on Sadr’s followers earlier this year, driving his black-masked Mehdi Army fighters off the streets of Baghdad and cities of the Shia south, which US officials say gave Maliki new confidence in negotiations.—Reuters







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