16.07.2018



Geneva International Centre for Justice (GICJ) admonished the Iraqi authorities and their security forces for their violence on demonstrators protesting against the deteriorating living conditions in Iraq and the government’s failure to provide basic services.

GICJ, asserted that carrying out peaceful protests and demonstrations is a guaranteed right not only under the Iraqi constitution, but also under laws and international conventions that Iraq is party to. It stressed that the use of the armed forces to violently quell demonstrators would most definitely put Iraqi authorities under international scrutiny and accountability.

The Iraqi protests, which began almost a week ago, passed through Basra, Nasiriyah, Maysan and then Najaf. They were also moving overnight to many areas in Baghdad, where thousands of people joined the demonstrations out of outrage over the failure of the government in providing basic needs and services such as electricity, water, food security, jobs etc. The protesters stormed local government buildings and ruling party headquarters, as well as the Najaf International Airport. The demonstrators also chanted slogans against the ruling parties and their militias and opposed what they termed an ‘Iranian intervention into Iraq’. Iraqi citizens from the province of Basra wrote letters to Geneva International Centre for Justice, saying that "the local and the central governments are proving, day after day, their inability to meet any legitimate needs; and our most fundamental and basic demand is to improve services." These authorities are corrupt and commit abuses against their own people, whether by deprivation of rights, firing at demonstrators or increasing the frequency of arbitrary arrests and executions.

In other letters, citizens confirmed the shooting of demonstrators in multiple areas of Iraq. On Friday, 13 July, the authorities killed 1 demonstrator and wounded 11 others in the province of Maysan, 24 people in the province of Dhi Qar and 3 others in Najaf.

Instead of responding to their legitimate demands, the leaders of the ruling parties described the demonstrators as "criminals" and said that protesters have "relations with the Islamic State”. Sources of the authorities confirmed the full readiness of the security forces to take decisive actions against demonstrators. In an attempt to prevent social media from relaying news of the demonstrations, the Iraqi authorities closed the Internet and telephone networks today at dawn.

These demonstrations are the latest of a series of demonstrations in Iraq for several years, dating back to the US invasion and occupation in 2003, with demonstrators protesting against the situation in the country at all levels.
In all previous instances, the authorities used violence and repression through its security forces to put an end to the demonstrations, and also resorted to the intimidation of demonstrators with the employment of armed groups and militias. Several leaders of the demonstrations were assassinated, while others were arrested and threatened.

To this end, Geneva International Centre for Justice (GICJ) warns the Iraqi authorities of any action that would restrict freedom of assembly and association, and stresses that the use of violence or arms against demonstrators would place the authorities under international accountability. We at GICJ would like to remind these authorities that the right to assembly and freedom of expression and opinion are guaranteed under international conventions, including but not limited to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Iraq is a committed party to and thus must fully respect without any reservations whatsoever.

Read in Arabic: https://www.gicj.org/ar/2017-01-13-21-33-26/1438-demonstrations-in-iraq-ar


Further reading:


GICJ articles on Iraq:

27 Years, Waiting Accountability for the Victims Proposals to Legalize Child Marriage in Iraq International Crimes and Accountability in Iraq: At Any Cost? UNSCR Res. 2379 on Accountability of ISIS Crimes GICJ on Recent Attack in Tal-Afar Mosul: Destruction and Accountability

GICJ documents human rights violations that take place in Iraq and reports them to the concerned bodies of the United Nations such as the Human Rights Council and the UN Special Procedures. The aim of this process is to ensure that all human rights...

Read More ...

Saida Ahmad Baghili – The face of starvation

Lest We Forget: Stories of Real Victims


Saida Ahmad Baghili – The face of starvation
Photo 1. Saida Afmad Baghili on wheelchair in the Al Thawra hospital, Yemen, 25 October 2016 Yemen has always been among the poorest countries in the world and has always faced challenged linked to...
Laxmi Agarwal - The Acid Attack Survivor

Lest We Forget: Stories of Real Victims


Laxmi Agarwal - The Acid Attack Survivor
Laxmi Agarwal was 15 years old when she became the victim of a brutal act of revenge in Delhi in 2005. She met with this fate after refusing a marriage proposal from a family friend who became...
Ali Shallal al-Qaysi

Lest We Forget: Stories of Real Victims


Ali Shallal al-Qaysi
In 2004, photos of Iraqi prisoners tethered to dog leashes and electrical wires dominated the news. The centre of the scandal was Abu Ghraib - one of the world’s most notorious prisons. At the time,...
Zaidoun Mamoun al-Samara

Lest We Forget: Stories of Real Victims


Zaidoun Mamoun al-Samara
On January 4, 2004, a group of US soldiers in Samarra, Iraq, murdered Zaidoun Mamoun al-Samarrai, a young Iraqi man who was not yet twenty years old. On January 4, 2004, a group of US soldiers in...
Scar(r)ed for Life: Everyday Violations around Israel’s Illegal Settlements

Lest We Forget: Stories of Real Victims


Scar(r)ed for Life: Everyday Violations around Israel’s Illegal Settlements
Settler violence is a daily part of life for many Palestinians: Armed Israeli settlers regularly carry out attacks against Palestinian civilians and property by, inter alia, shooting and harassing...
In the Rubble of their Homes

Lest We Forget: Stories of Real Victims


In the Rubble of their Homes
In Halaweh, a Palestinian village in the South Hebron Hills, in which the Israeli army had conducted a demolition four days earlier on 2 February, a few Palestinian residents welcomed us in front of...
Jamalida Begum – Rohingya Survivor Escapes Horror

Lest We Forget: Stories of Real Victims


Jamalida Begum – Rohingya Survivor Escapes Horror
Approximately 1 million Rohingya people reside in Myanmar (Burma), mainly in the Rakhine State (formerly Arakan, an independent and sovereign state) that is situated along the East Coast of the Bay...
Inside Guantanamo, when the “war on terror” justifies all means

Lest We Forget: Stories of Real Victims


Inside Guantanamo, when the “war on terror” justifies all means
Mohamedou Ould Slahi was born in Mauritania from a poor family. When he was only 18, he won a prestigious scholarship to study in Germany, where he lived for years. In 1991 and 1992, he did what...
The toll for freedom

Lest We Forget: Stories of Real Victims


The toll for freedom
The Syrian conflict has triggered negative consequences and has worsened the already fragile conditions of a developing country and a modernising society. The level of economic and social...
Omran Daqneesh – a silence that shakes every conscience

Lest We Forget: Stories of Real Victims


Omran Daqneesh – a silence that shakes every conscience
On August 2016, the world’s conscience was shaken by the picture of a five-year-old boy, covered in dust and blood, sitting in the back of an ambulance, visibly shocked and weary. The little boy,...

Videos and medias

Watch the video

GICJ Newsletter

Register a violation with GICJ