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The Inquiry

How close did Iraq come to civil war?

The Inquiry

BBC

News Commentary, News

4.61.7K Ratings

🗓️ 22 September 2022

⏱️ 24 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

August 2022. Political tensions in Iraq boil over, and peaceful demonstrations outside the country’s parliament turn violent. The sounds of gun and rocket fire return to Baghdad, and 30 people are killed.

The violence ends when populist leader Muqtada al-Sadr tells his followers to lay down their arms and go home. His Sadrist party won the most seats in the previous election, but his inability to form a majority government has led to the political deadlock.

Politics in a country as diverse as Iraq is complicated, with Shia, Sunni and Kurdish groups, and well-armed militias. Add oil revenues and political interference by Iraq’s neighbour Iran into the mix, and you have a potentially volatile situation.

So this week on the Inquiry we’re asking, How close did Iraq come to civil war?

Presenter: Tanya Beckett Producers: Ravi Naik and Christopher Blake Editor: Tara McDermott Technical Producers: Richard Hannaford and Mitch Goodall Broadcast Coordinator: Jacqui Johnson

(Image: Supporters storm Republican Palace after Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr announced retirement from politics, Baghdad, Iraq - 29 Aug 2022: by MURTAJA LATEEF/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock)

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is the sound of crowd science.

0:02.4

We shoot a laser beam at this atom.

0:05.1

Is that a big canister of oxygen in the background?

0:07.7

Oh, there's a wasp in there.

0:09.3

Yeah, perhaps possibly the most disgusting thing I heard this morning.

0:13.6

But it's one of the nicest fun facts you're going to hear today.

0:16.4

So here I'm actually holding a doughnut.

0:18.4

What are you going to do with that?

0:19.2

Find out more at the end of this podcast.

0:23.5

Welcome to the inquiry with me, Tania Beckett.

0:27.3

One question, four expert witnesses, and an answer.

0:45.2

It was a seemingly low key statement from a man little known outside the Middle East.

0:51.0

But when sheer cleric Kazim al-Hairi said his followers

0:55.2

should accept the authority of Iran's supreme leader,

0:59.3

his words became a flashpoint for violence in neighbouring Iraq,

1:03.4

in which 30 people lost their lives.

1:14.0

Iraq's capital Baghdad had been on the edge for months.

1:18.6

Elections a year before had led to popular sheer leader,

1:21.7

Maktada Al-Sada, triumphing in the polls.

1:25.4

But he was denied the power he wanted, and a deadlock followed.

1:30.4

For him and his followers, the idea that on top of that,

1:33.9

he had a duty to accept authority from Iran was a step too far.

...

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