Agence France Presse NAJAF, Iraq:
Powerful Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr Monday urged his followers to hold anti-corruption
protests in Baghdad this week, the first major political figure to issue such a
call.
Sadr’s spokesman Salah al-Obeidi read a statement that called for the
Iraqi people, and specifically Sadr supporters, to rally in the capital Friday, at the request of
Sadr in “support of the reform process.”
Thousands of people have for weeks
taken to the streets of Baghdad and Shiite cities in the south on Fridays to protest rampant
corruption and abysmal services that plague Iraq.
They have railed against
the poor quality of services, especially power outages that leave just a few hours of
government-supplied electricity per day during the scorching summer
heat.
Their demands were given a boost when top Shiite cleric Grand
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani called Aug. 7 for Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi to take “drastic measures”
against corruption.
Sistani, who is revered by millions, said that “minor
steps” announced by Abadi had fallen short. Abadi rolled out a reform program two days
later.
Parliament signed off on Abadi’s proposals as well as additional
reforms, and the prime minister has begun issuing orders for changes, including cutting 11 cabinet
posts and slashing the number of guards for officials.
But even with
popular support and backing from Sistani, the fact that parties across the political spectrum
benefit from graft is a major obstacle to the nascent reform effort. |