BAGHDAD: Iraqi policemen using their own hunting rifles killed protesters in the capital Baghdad this week, the government said, adding that the perpetrators had been suspended.
“According to eyewitnesses and forensic data, hunting rifles killed” two protesters, Interior Minister Othman Al-Ghanemi told reporters on Thursday.
The minister gave the names of three policemen and displayed the arms and ammunition they had purportedly used.
Hunting rifles were in the personal possession of the three, “who decided on their own account to make use of them,” he told reporters.
They have confessed to using the weapons and have been suspended from their duties, Ghanemi said, adding that judicial proceedings were underway.
The account of the killings, which took place earlier this week, differed from that given previously by medics.
Medical sources said three protesters died but authorities mentioned only two deaths on Thursday.
Medics also said the three dead protesters had been hit by tear gas canisters, rather than live rounds, a version of events the government has denied.
Ghanemi said an investigation had been opened because the federal police had deployed “to fire live rounds in the air,” contravening orders not to use live fire by the prime minister, who heads the armed forces.
Mustafa Al-Kadhemi came to power in early May, replacing Adel Abdel Mahdi, whose position became untenable amid months of protests stretching back to October last year.
The new premier has been keen to distance himself from his predecessor, who accused an unnamed third force of being behind the deaths of security personnel and hundreds of protesters.
The government announced on Thursday that 560 people had been killed in protests since October, a tally it said included those slain early this week.
Nearly all the dead were demonstrators killed at the hands of security forces, said Hosham Dawod, an adviser to the premier handling an investigation into the protests.
The families of each of the 560 victims will each be compensated with 10 million Iraqi dinars (around $8,400), Dawod said.
Iraqi policemen killed protesters with hunting rifles: Minister
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Iraqi policemen killed protesters with hunting rifles: Minister
- Hunting rifles were in the personal possession of the three, “who decided on their own account to make use of them,” Interior Minister Othman Al-Ghanemi told reporters
- The government announced on Thursday that 560 people had been killed in protests since October, a tally it said included those slain early this week
Kremlin: Room for negotiation on Iran ‘not exhausted’
- Spokesman Dmitry Peskov called for all sides to show restraint and refrain from force
MOSCOW: The Kremlin said on Thursday there was still room for negotiations in the standoff between ally Tehran and Washington, after US President Donald Trump threatened new military strikes on Iran.
The US has not ruled out using force against Iran, with rights groups saying Tehran’s crackdown on protests left thousands dead.
“It is clear that the potential for negotiations is not exhausted,” spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists, including from AFP.
He called for “all sides to show restraint and refrain from methods of force,” saying: “Any use of force can only create chaos in the region and lead to very dangerous consequences.”
Trump warned that the US was “ready, willing and able” to hit Iran “if necessary.”
The Islamic Republic’s top diplomat Abbas Araghchi said its forces have their “fingers on the trigger” to “powerfully respond” to any US strikes.
Iran emerged as one of Russia’s main allies during the war in Ukraine.
Independent groups said Iranian security forces have killed thousands while suppressing mass protests against Tehran’s regime.
The US has not ruled out using force against Iran, with rights groups saying Tehran’s crackdown on protests left thousands dead.
“It is clear that the potential for negotiations is not exhausted,” spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists, including from AFP.
He called for “all sides to show restraint and refrain from methods of force,” saying: “Any use of force can only create chaos in the region and lead to very dangerous consequences.”
Trump warned that the US was “ready, willing and able” to hit Iran “if necessary.”
The Islamic Republic’s top diplomat Abbas Araghchi said its forces have their “fingers on the trigger” to “powerfully respond” to any US strikes.
Iran emerged as one of Russia’s main allies during the war in Ukraine.
Independent groups said Iranian security forces have killed thousands while suppressing mass protests against Tehran’s regime.
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