Iraqi protesters clash with police close to oil field

Iraqi protesters clash with police close to oil field
Angry protesters have fought with police in south Iraq following demonstrations calling for more jobs for locals at a nearby oil field.
2 min read
07 August, 2016
Protesters were demanding jobs in the oil sector [Getty]

Hundreds of Iraqis from the southern district of Zubair clashed with security forces after attempted to block a road leading to oil fields on Sunday.

Police detained dozens of demonstrators following the incident, which did not lead to any injuries among the protesters or the security forces, an AFP correspondent reported.

Zubair lies near the country's main port city of Basra, 450 kilometres (280 miles) southeast of Baghdad.

The protesters tried to block access to some oil fields in the area to press their demand for jobs in the sector, which is the backbone of the nation's economy.

I graduated in computer engineering five years ago and I still haven't found a job.
- local protester


Exports from Iraq's southern oil fields topped 3.2 million barrels last month. The country is the world's fourth producer and holds the world's fifth-largest reserves.

"Zubair's oil is being stolen by thieves," the protesters chanted. "It's our oil, we have a right to it," was another of their slogans.

"I graduated in computer engineering five years ago and I still haven't found a job," said one of the demonstrators, Ahmed Hassan al-Tamimi.

"Most of the youth in Zubair is unemployed. Even when the oil companies are hiring, they bring people from other provinces and nobody cares about our area because we don't belong to any party and have no connections," he said.


Despite its oil wealth, the Basra region suffers from poor services and was at the heart of the protest movement sparked last summer by exasperation over the lack of electricity and water.