AFP notes, "A gas tanker exploded in Baghdad on Saturday night killing at least nine people and injuring 13 others, security forces said, adding that it was an accident." KURDISTAN 24 adds, "Prime Minister Mohammad Shia’ Al-Sudani and President Latif Rashid have both asked for an immediate probe into the deadly incident." Why a probe? Maybe they're not sure if it was an accident. NEWS 84 MEDIA states, "Officials said on condition of anonymity that it was unclear at this time whether the explosion was due to a technical fault or a targeted attack. The blast came two days after Iraq’s parliament approved a new cabinet in a long-awaited vote, which was described as a major breakthrough in de-escalating ongoing political tensions in the country."
In other news, Chenar Chalak (RUDAW) reports:
The mother of a former opposition bloc head in the Kurdistan Region
parliament told reporters on Sunday that medical reports have concluded
that her son was “poisoned” and that he is receiving treatment abroad,
in light of repeated remarks from the bloc denying the seriousness of
his illness.
The New Generation Movement (NGM) last week alerted Kazim Faruq, former
head of the bloc, that he must stop accepting his salaries as an MP and
“return the money which he has received for the last year and seven
months” due to his inactivity.
Faruq’s family responded to the comments of the NGM, telling Rudaw and
other media outlets that the reason the MP has not been seen publicly is
because he has been receiving treatment in hospitals abroad for several
months, without specifying where he is being treated.
“We took him [Faruq] abroad… and they [foreign doctors] told us your son
has been poisoned,” Akhtar Ahmad, Faruq’s mother, told reporters in
front of her house in Sulaimani on Sunday, noting that the family cannot
reveal where the MP is because they can no longer tell “who is an enemy
and who is a friend.”
Twitter has several Tweets about this development including:
The family of Kazim Faruq, a member of Kurdistan parliament from New Generation’s ticket, today told reporters that their son has been poisoned.
— Karwan Faidhi Dri (@KarwanFaidhiDri) October 30, 2022
The family and some of his colleagues believe that the New Generation may have done it but the party has denied it.
📸: file/Facebook pic.twitter.com/nGQVKkNAhM
Of course, if you go back a month, you'll also find this:
3-Former NG caucus head Kazim Faruq resigned last winter w/o much explanation but appears to have had a medical issue. He had been banned from the grounds of parliament since March 31, 2021 after he threw his shoes at Speaker Rewaz Fayaq during an argument over the session agenda
— Winthrop Rodgers (@wrodgers2) September 20, 2022
Meanwhile, THE PEOPLE'S DISPATCH notes The October Revolution:
This October marks the third anniversary of the 2019 popular protests in Iraq. On Tuesday, October 25, a large number of people gathered in the Tahrir square in capital Baghdad and paid homage to the people who were killed in the protests. They raised slogans in support of what has been termed by the protesters as the Tishreen movement.
The countrywide protests in 2019, rooted in the long-term grievances of people against successive governments, went on for months. Before the global COVID-19 outbreak forced them to end, the protests were successful in forcing the then government led by Adil Abdul Mahdi to resign, putting the ruling classes on the defensive and pressing for reforms.
Caretaker prime minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi, who came to power in May 2020 after months of uncertainty, had promised to deliver on some of the major demands raised by the protesters, including rebuilding the economy and punishing those guilty for the deaths of over 600 people including protesters and others.
Three years down the line and with a new government on the horizon, none of these promises have been met. This is likely to lead the vast majority of pro-reformers pushing for their demands in the coming days.
Economic and political aspects of the protests
The 2019 protests were one of the largest in Iraq’s history since the 2003 US invasion. Long-term grievances regarding inefficiency of successive administrations and the widely perceived corruption among the ruling establishment were at the center of the public anger. In their slogans, the protesters repeatedly denounced the failure of the system created under the supervision of the US occupation in tackling the issues faced by the people, such as rising poverty, unemployment, and basic services delivery.
At the time of the protests, the official rate of poverty in the country of approximately 40 million people was rising. Even before the pandemic hit in 2020, the poverty rate had risen to above 31%. Oil-rich Iraq witnessed an unprecedented rise in poverty during the COVID-19 outbreak. While the government claimed that the poverty rate was coming down after the pandemic, a large number of Iraqis are still forced to live a life as paupers.
Since oil revenues make up the bulk of Iraq’s federal budget – around 96% – the economy remains vulnerable to market fluctuation.
Iraqi youth, who make up the majority
of the population, were at the center of the 2019 protests. The
unemployment rate among the youth – fresh graduates from the university
and others – was above 40% at the time of the protests.
The majority of Iraqis were forced to live without the basic amenities such as power, sanitation, and health care. Protesters claimed that these failures on the economic front were the result of inefficiency and corruption of the ruling elite. They also pointed to structural reasons such as the system of Muhasasa or sectarian quota based on distribution of political posts for this inefficiency and corruption.
The following sites updated: