Alcohol is prohibited in Iraq, and demonstrators can be heard shouting, "Iraq is not an Islamic nation," as a result of this

 


The import, manufacture, and sale of alcoholic drinks of any type were formally prohibited in Iraq on March 4 in a repetition of a prohibition that was approved in 2016, but whose enforcement was halted at the time owing to significant opposition from secularists and minorities.

According to the new law, infractions are punishable by fines ranging from 10 million to 25 million dinars ($7,700–$19,000).

The law enacting the prohibition was published in the official gazette of Iraq last month, opening the path for its implementation. Shiite Islamist parties and militias in the so-called Coordination Framework control the coalition of the current Iraqi prime minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, who took office in October, and support the embargo.

Now that the legislation has taken effect, liquor outlets are still operating throughout the nation, including in Baghdad, Erbil, and other cities. Yet, other Iraqis, particularly those who belong to the Yazidi and Christian groups, are voicing their worries.

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