Iraqi activist jailed over tweet 'insulting' pro-Iran paramilitaries, 2 killed during support rally
An Iraqi activist has been sentenced to three years in prison over a disputed tweet deemed insulting to a pro-Iran paramilitary force, court documents seen by AFP Wednesday showed.
Haidar al-Zaidi, 20, had written on Facebook Sunday that he faced charges of "insulting state institutions".
On Monday, the court delivered its verdict, which Zaidi can appeal.
New York-based advocacy group Human Rights Watch called on the Iraqi authorities not to use the courts as a "tool to suppress peaceful criticism" and called for the activist's immediate release.
Zaidi was prosecuted over a post, long since deleted from his Twitter account, criticising the slain deputy commander of the paramilitary Hashed al-Shaabi force, Abu Mahdi al-Mohandis. Screen grabs of the disputed tweet were shared by accounts close to the Hashed.
السجن ثلاث سنوات على الناشط التشريني حيدر الزيدي بتهـمة الأساءة الى "هيئة الحــشد الشعبي" والمرجعيات الدينية !ً pic.twitter.com/fTlOIplqod
— ابن المرجعية (@samtyh8) December 5, 2022
Mohandis was killed in a US drone strike in Baghdad in January 2020 alongside Iranian foreign operations commander General Qassem Suleimani.
He is revered as a martyr by the Hashed, a paramilitary group integrated into Iraq's security forces whose political wing forms part of Iraq's ruling coalition.
The court granted the Hashed permission to seek financial damages from Zaidi for the alleged insult.
Zaidi has denied he posted the tweet, claiming his account was hacked, according to HRW.
"Regardless of who posted the Twitter message, the Iraqi justice system should not be used as a tool to suppress peaceful criticism of the authorities or armed actors," said HRW's deputy Middle East director, Adam Coogle.
"It is a sad reflection on the rule of law in Iraq that an activist like Zaidi gets three years in prison for a Twitter post he says he didn't write while dozens of officials and armed groups enjoy impunity for killing activists and protesters."
During a rally in support of Zaidi in the southern city pf Nasiriyah on Wednesday, two protesters were shot dead in clashes with security forces, a health official told AFP.
"Two protesters were shot dead" in the clashes and 21 others were wounded, including five by gunfire, said Hussein Riyad, a spokesman for the Dhi Qar provincial health ministry.
القوات القمعية التابعة لحكومة #الإطار_التنسيقي تقمع بالرصاص الحي المتظاهرين المطالبين بالإفراج عن حيدر الزيدي في الناصرية وأنباء عن سقوط أكثر من شهيدين وعشرات الجرحى!#الحرية_لحيدر_الزيدي pic.twitter.com/xz5n1AT8yo
— سلام الحسيني (@salamAJ5) December 7, 2022
#الناصرية قبل قليل..
— Ammar Alhadithy | عمار الحديثي (@Ammar_alhadithy) December 7, 2022
ومصادر طبية تتحدث عن شهيد و15 جريحا نتيجة مصادمات مع قوات الأمن pic.twitter.com/H3kTHrQNJK
Iraq was hit by a wave of protests in late 2019 that were crushed by the security forces in a bloody crackdown that killed more than 600 people.
In June, the UN mission in Iraq spoke of an "environment of fear and intimidation" created by assaults and bombings carried out by unidentified armed elements and "aimed at suppressing dissent and criticism".
On social media, users contrasted the three-year jail term handed down against Zaidi with the recent release on bail of businessman Nour Zuhair Jassem, who is accused of fraudulently withdrawing a significant part of $2.5 billion in public funds that were stolen from a government account.
الخلاصة حيدر يطلع كان بها
— HASSAN ALIRAQI🇮🇶 (@UBU_VVV) December 7, 2022
مايطلع براحتكم عدكم ادوات
تلعبون بيها واحنا عدنا 🤷♂️ . #الناصرية pic.twitter.com/njcjQnbgaX