Iraq PM-designate must form independent cabinet or face 'hell', Sadr advisor warns

Iraq PM-designate must form independent cabinet or face 'hell', Sadr advisor warns
Sadr, a former militia leader with millions of devoted followers across the country, first backed the rallies but split with the movement by endorsing Allawi last week.
4 min read
09 February, 2020
Sadr has amassed a large and loyal following in recent years [Getty
Iraq's incoming prime minister will face "hell" and be removed within days if he includes members of the political elite in his cabinet, a top aide to cleric Moqtada Sadr has warned.

Premier-designate Mohammad Allawi has until March 2 to form a new cabinet, to be put to the protest-rocked country's parliament for a vote of confidence. 

Thousands of anti-government demonstrators have already rejected his nomination as prime minister.

Sadr, a former militia leader with millions of devoted followers across the country, first backed the rallies but split with the movement by endorsing Allawi last week.

Kadhem Issawi, a senior advisor to Sadr, insisted the new cabinet must not include members of the political elite - particularly Shia military groups like the powerful Hashed al-Shaabi network, which rivals Sadr.

"If Sayyed Moqtada hears that Allawi has granted a ministry to any side, specifically the Shiite armed factions, Iraq will turn into hell for him and will topple him in just three days," Issawi told a gathering including an AFP journalist late on Saturday.

Sadr even rejected the appointment of members of his own movement to the government, Issawi said. 

He said Sadr's supporters would be willing to encircle Baghdad's Green Zone, the high-security enclave housing government offices and foreign embassies, to ensure a non-partisan cabinet gets a vote of confidence. 

'Good step'

Sadr has a long-standing rivalry with the Hashed, formed to fight the Islamic State group in 2014, as many of its members defected from his own movement.

In 2018, the cleric's Saeroon parliamentary bloc joined forces with the Hashed's political arm Fatah to form a shaky alliance that brought Adel Abdel Mahdi to the premiership.

But the partnership frayed, and two months after popular protests demanding government change erupted in October, Abdel Mahdi stepped down. 

On February 1, Iraq's bitterly divided political parties named Allawi as a successor but in private, government and security sources have expressed scepticism he will get his cabinet through the deeply-divided parliament. 

Sadr immediately endorsed Allawi's nomination as a "good step" but Issawi appeared to soften Sadrist support.

"We haven't adopted Allawi. We just said we wouldn't veto him," he said. 

Sadr has faced growing criticism by young anti-government demonstrators for a dizzying series of tweets recently in which he backed, then abandoned, then re-endorsed protests.

The cleric's supporters, usually identified in protest squares by their blue caps, have raided rival demonstrators and the ensuing violence has left eight anti-government activists dead over the last week. 

Issawi said Sadr still backed the rallies but alleged that drug use and other "moral" problems had tainted them.  

"We're against the protests being cleared out. We support their continuation but think they should be cleaned," he said. 

Issawi also laid down another red line: Sadr himself, who has a cult-like following in parts of Iraq. 

"They want to insult the symbolism and holiness of Sayyed Moqtada? Impossible," Issawi said. 

 

Nearly 550 Iraqis have been killed in protest-related violence since unprecedented anti-government demonstrations erupted in the capital and southern cities in October, the Iraqi Human Rights Commission said on Friday.

543 people have been killed since October, including 276 in Baghdad alone, the group said, noting 17 members of the security forces are among the overall nationwide death toll.

Iraq's security forces have used live ammunition, tear gas, smoke bombs and even machine gun fire to try to disperse rallies in the capital and Shia-majority south.

The Commission found that many of the wounded or killed were shot by live rounds, but Iraq's government has repeatedly denied its security forces are shooting at the protesters.

Others have died when military-grade tear gas canisters have pierced their skulls or chests, after security forces improperly fired such equipment.

The Commission did not lay blame on any particular side but protesters themselves have singled out armed factions and the military wings of political parties, alongside the security forces.

The United Nations, for its part, has accused unnamed "militias" for a vast campaign of assassinations, kidnappings and threats.

Meanwhile, Iraq's top Shia cleric Ayatollah Ali Sistani condemned recent deadly attacks on anti-government demonstrators, chastising security forces for not doing more to prevent violence in protest squares across the country.

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