The
Iraqi government has appealed to the UN Security Council to remove Turkish troops and Erdogan has "criticised"the action
Iraqi protesters rally against Turkish troop deployment
Thousands of Iraqi protesters have staged demon strations across the country to denounce Turkey’s deployment of military forces near the embattled northern city of Mosul.
Iraqis
demonstrate against Turkey’s military intervention into their
country at Tahrir (Liberation) Square in central Baghdad, Iraq, on
December 11, 2015. (Photo by al-Sumaria TV)
12
September, 2015
On
Friday evening, people converged on Tahrir (Liberation) Square in
central Baghdad to condemn in the strongest terms the presence of
Turkish troops in Iraq, calling Ankara’s move “a violation of
Iraq’s sovereignty.”
The
demonstrators also called for the immediate withdrawal of Turkish
troops from the Iraqi soil, Arabic-language al-Sumaria satellite
television network reported.
Elsewhere
in the city of Nasiriyah, about 320 kilometers (200 miles) southeast
of Baghdad, demonstrators gathered near Habboubi Square, calling on
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi and Defense Minister Khaled
al-Obaidi to take “a firm stance” against Turkey’s act of
“aggression.”
A
similar demonstration was held in the city of al-Diwaniyah, where
hundreds of people censured Turkey’s military intervention in Iraq,
urging the Iraqi government to expel the Turkish Ambassador to
Baghdad Faruk Kaymakci and sever all ties with Ankara.
"Iraqis
burn Turkish flag in protest against Turkey’s military intervention
into their country in Basra, southern Iraq, on December 11, 2015.
(Al-Baghdadia TV network)
Additionally,
protesters burnt the Turkish flag in Iraq’s southern oil-rich city
of Basra in protest against Turkey’s military incursion into Iraqi
soil.
Earlier
in the day, Abadi strongly condemned Turkey’s deployment of troops
to northern Iraq, saying Baghdad does not consider it as an
anti-terror move but as a flagrant violation of the Arab country’s
territorial integrity and sovereignty.
The
Iraqi premier stated that the Turkish troops had entered Iraqi
territories without the consent of the Iraqi government, adding that
his country has never requested ground troops from any foreign
country since it has enough soldiers and police forces to maintain
its security and fight against terrorists.
"Iraqi
Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi
He
also ordered the Foreign Ministry to lodge a formal complaint
with the United Nations Security Council against Turkey’s
military presence in Iraq “to order Turkey to withdraw its troops
immediately.”
On
the same day, Iraq’s top Shia cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani
also called on the government to show “no tolerance” towards any
side that violates the country’s sovereignty.
No
country should “send its soldiers to the territory of another state
under the pretext of supporting it in fighting terrorism without the
conclusion of an agreement... between the governments of the two
countries,” said the statement, read by the hugely influential
cleric’s spokesman Sheikh Abdul Mehdi Karbala’i.
Tensions
have been running high between Baghdad and Ankara since December 4,
when Turkey deployed some 150 soldiers, equipped with heavy weapons
and backed by 20 to 25 tanks, to the outskirts of Mosul, the capital
of Iraq’s Nineveh province.
Ankara
claims that its troops have been deployed in northern Iraq to train
Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga fighters against the Daesh Takfiri terrorist
group, and that the move was in line with previous agreements with
the Baghdad government. Iraq, however, denies any such deal.
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