Anti-American demonstrations took place in Iraq on October 18, 2008. People demanded that the imperialist occupation inside the country be halted immediately.
Originally uploaded by Pan-African News Wire File Photos
18:28 Mecca time, 15:28 GMT
Al-Sadr condemns Iraq security plan
Supporters of al-Sadr turned out in force for Friday's rally in Baghdad against a deal with US
Supporters of Muqtada al-Sadr, a populist Shia leader, have gathered in the Iraqi capital, to demand the immediate withdrawal of US troops and to condemn a planned US-Iraq security deal.
The march began in Sadr City, a poor suburb of Baghdad, on Saturday and was planned to end in nearby Mustansiriya Square.
The protest was originally to be held on April 9, the anniversary of the fall of Saddam Hussein's government, but was postponed due to violent clashes between al-Sadr's al-Mahdi Army fighters and US and Iraqi forces.
"No, No, to America! No, No to the devil!"shouted crowds of men, women and children as they walked through the streets of Sadr City towards Mustansiriya Square, a distance of about three kilometres.
A message from al-Sadr, reported to be in Iran, was read out at the protest by Sheikh Abdul-Hadi al-Mohammadawi, his aide, calling on the Iraqi parliament to reject a US-Iraqi security pact that would extend the presence of American forces in Iraq.
Community resistance
Abdulhay Yahya Zalloum, an Iraqi analyst and author, told Al Jazeera the pact is facing resistance from most communities in Iraq.
"It is not only al-Sadr that is opposed to this so-called security pact ... the Christian community, at least a big chunk of it, as well as most of the Sunni community oppose it too.
"Very recently the Sunni community declared that it is against Islam to have any security pact with the United States.
"We have to realise that, firstly, the United States came uninvited and, secondly, this so-called draft has been negotiated while 150,000 American troops plus contractors, 50,000 of them at least, are still in Iraq.
"Thirdly, it is a government that was actually chosen by the Americans, therefore when you have a country under occupation with pseudo-indepence, you don't expect that the terms would be to the best interests of Iraq."
Country's 'stigma'
Al-Sadr said that anybody who claims the agreement will end "the occupation of our land," or "tells you that it gives Iraqi sovereignty is a liar".
He also said that the deal "will stigmatise Iraq and its government for years to come".
The public show of opposition comes as US and Iraqi leaders near a December 31 deadline to reach agreement on the deal.
An agreement on a draft security deal has reportedly been reached, which would govern the future status of US forces in Iraq after the present UN mandate ends in December.
But the pact has still to be approved by leaders of both countries.
Details have not been made public.
A point of contention in the months-long negotiations has been whether US troops and contractors would fall exclusively under US jurisdiction if accused of serious crimes in Iraq.
Robert Gates, the US defence secretary, said on Friday in Washington that US military leaders "are all satisfied that our men and women in uniform serving in Iraq are well protected".
Bahraini official's visit
In other news, Bahrain's foreign minister arrived in Baghdad on Saturday for a one-day visit. Bahrain named a new ambassador to Iraq last month.
The Iraqi foreign ministry said Sheikh Khalid bin Ahmed Al-Khalifa will hold talks with his Iraqi counterpart, Hoshyar Zebari.
More senior Arab politicians and diplomats have started to visit Iraq in a sign of increasing ties between Iraq and its neighbours.
Three years ago, Bahrain's high-level envoy in Iraq, Hassan Malallah al-Ansari, was wounded when attackers tried to abduct him on his way to work in Baghdad.
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