The shooting of unarmed protesters in Iraq on Friday night is strongly condemned by top UN officials who called for the perpetrators to be “identified and brought to justice without delay”.
New reports from the region put Friday’s death toll in the dozens with more than 100 injured during nighttime attacks by unidentified gunmen that targeted anti-Government demonstrators in central Baghdad.
“The deliberate killing of unarmed protesters by armed elements is nothing less than an atrocity against the people of Iraq,” said Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert, the Secretary-General’s Special Representative in the crisis-gripped country.
She also urged Iraqi Armed Forces to spare no effort to protect the peaceful protesters from violence by armed elements operating outside State control, and at the same time called on peaceful protesters to cooperate constructively to ensure the peaceful protests can be duly protected.
“Acts of violence that are gang-driven, arising from external loyalties, politically motivated or intended to settle scores, risk placing Iraq on a dangerous trajectory,” said Ms. Hennis-Plasschaert, who also heads up the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI).
Briefing the UN Security Council via teleconference from the Iraqi capital just four days ago, Ms.Hennis-Plasschaert said that “out of love for their homeland”, thousands of Iraqis have taken to the streets, asking for their country to reach its “full potential for the benefit of all Iraqis”.
“However,” she lamented “they are paying an unimaginable price for their voices to be heard”, pointing out that since 1 October, more than 400 people have been killed and more than 19,000 injured.
The UNAMI head argued that the country was as at a crossroads that could not be resolved by “buying time with band-aid solutions and coercive measures”.
She called on Iraqis to build a sovereign, stable, inclusive and prosperous country: “Now is the time to act”, Ms.Hennis-Plasschaert said, wrapping up her Council briefing. “The great hopes of so many Iraqis call for bold, forward thinking”. (Source: UN News)