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Iraq unrest: Protesters set fire to Iranian consulate in Najaf
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Protesters
chanted "Iran out of Iraq" as the consulate burned
|
Protesters
chanted "Iran out of Iraq" as flames engulfed the building.
Reports
say staff at the consulate managed to flee just before protesters broke in.
This is the
second attack on an Iranian consulate in Iraq this month after the office in the
Shia holy city of Karbala was
targeted three weeks ago.
At
least 344 people have been killed in nearly two months of unrest.
People are demanding
an end to corruption, more jobs and better public services in the
demonstrations, which have mostly affected southern Iraq and the capital
Baghdad.
Demonstrators
accuse Iran of interfering in Iraq's internal affairs and propping up the
government.
Protesters
stormed the consulate and set it alight, despite police attempts to keep them
at bay.
Iran,
which backs the government and a number of powerful local Shia Muslim militias,
had previously urged protesters to seek changes within the "framework of legal
structures".
It
has also accused the West of "spreading turmoil" in Iraq.
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Consulate
staff managed to evacuate before the building was stormed
|
Elsewhere, security
forces shot dead two people in Karbala on Tuesday night and two in Baghdad on
Wednesday, while a fifth person was killed after security forces opened fire in
Basra, Reuters reported.
Protesters
blocked government employees from entering work in Basra with slabs of concrete
painted as mock coffins of relatives lost in the uprising, an eyewitness said.
Why are people protesting?
Prime
Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi took office just over a year ago, promising reforms
that have not materialised.
On
1 October, young Iraqis angered by his failure to tackle high unemployment,
endemic corruption and poor public services took to the streets of Baghdad for
the first time.
The
protests escalated and spread across the country after security personnel
responded with deadly force.
After the first wave
of protests, which lasted six days and saw 149 civilians killed, Mr Abdul Mahdi
promised to reshuffle his cabinet, cut the salaries of high-ranking officials,
and announced schemes to reduce youth unemployment.
But
the protesters said their demands had not been met and returned to the streets
in late October.



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