More than a thousand Iraqis marched in west Baghdad on Saturday in a rare public demonstration to protest against a wall they say the US military is planning to erect around their neighbourhood. Carrying an Iraqi national flag and banners condemning the wall the marchers in the predominantly Shia district of al-Washash chanted "No, no to the wall. No, no to America."
The US military sparked international outrage earlier this year when it began erecting a high concrete barrier to shield the Sunni Arab enclave of Adhamiya in east Baghdad from neighbouring Shia communities. While tens of thousands of Iraqis often mass for religious festivals, a pervasive fear of violence means public protests against US or Iraqi government policy are seldom seen. "Today we are saying no to the occupiers, no to the wall and no to all these disgraceful actions," said Abu Jalal al-Saraji, one of the local tribal leaders in al-Washash in Baghdad's predominantly Sunni Arab west Baghdad.
The US military had no immediate comment. The military has said it is erecting concrete walls in at least five Baghdad neighbourhoods. The aim is to protect the areas from gunmen as part of a US security crackdown, launched in mid-February, which involves 30,000 extra US troops.
The security push is seen as a final attempt by the US military to stem sectarian violence between majority Shias and minority Sunni Arabs and prevent all-out civil war. While the so-called "surge" is being credited with a marked drop in civilian and US casualties in September this year, car bombs and sectarian killings still occur daily.