Iraq’s Umm Qasr port operations halted by protesters

A picture taken on February 8, 2016 shows cargo ships docked at the Iraqi port of Umm Qasr near the southern city of Basra. (File/AFP)
Updated 30 October 2019
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Iraq’s Umm Qasr port operations halted by protesters

  • Umm Qasr receives imports of grain, vegetable oils and sugar shipments that feed a country largely dependent on imported food
  • The port had been operating at only around 20 percent of the normal level on Tuesday after protesters blocked its entrance

BASRA: Operations were at a complete standstill at Iraq’s Umm Qasr commodities port near Basra on Wednesday after protesters blocked its entrance in the previous day, port officials said.

Umm Qasr receives imports of grain, vegetable oils and sugar shipments that feed a country largely dependent on imported food.

The port had been operating at only around 20 percent of the normal level on Tuesday after protesters blocked its entrance, port officials said.

“Protesters have blocked the main entrance to the port. Trucks that carry goods can’t enter or leave the facility,” said one of the officials.

Thousands of Iraqis have taken to the streets this week in a second wave of protests against a government and a political elite they say is corrupt and out of touch.

The death toll since a broader wave of unrest started on Oct.1 is at least 250.

Further disruptions to operations could cause financial damage to the country and impact the inflow of commodities, port officials said in a statement.

“Halting the entry of commodities will cause a huge increase in the price of goods and create negative results,” the statement added.

Port officials say they are holding talks with protesters to try to persuade them to allow trucks and shift workers to enter and leave the port so it can resume normal operations.


Israeli court postpones trial of Adnan Ghaith until Jan. 20

Updated 6 sec ago
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Israeli court postpones trial of Adnan Ghaith until Jan. 20

  • Palestinian Authority’s governor of Jerusalem charged with violating military orders

LONDON: An Israeli court on Sunday postponed the trial of the Palestinian Authority’s governor of Jerusalem until Jan. 20.

Adnan Ghaith, who lives in the Silwan neighborhood of the city, is charged with violating Israeli military orders issued against him since he was appointed to the position in 2018.

Israeli authorities have imposed several military restrictions on Ghaith, including preventing his entry into the occupied West Bank and limiting his movement within Silwan.

He is also banned from communicating with 51 national and official figures, including Palestinian leaders.

Ghaith has been under house arrest for various lengths of time since 2018. Last year he traveled abroad — to Morocco — for the first time to attend an event supporting Jerusalem, after years of being denied the right to travel.

The Palestinian Authority said that Israeli authorities’ measures against Ghaith were intended “to cut off his connection with the political and national scenes in the occupied capital (Jerusalem),” the WAFA news agency reported.