Shi’ite Muslims hold Ashura procession in Nigeria, Beirut, Iran, Iraq, others amid tensions

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Shiite Muslims across the world, on Tuesday, trooped out in their millions to mark Ashoura, one of the most sacred religious holy days for the sect, holding rallies, prayers and self-flagellation amid soaring tensions in Nigeria, and other Middle East countries where the religious event held.

The Ashura procession of the Shiites is an annual religious festival carried out by the Islamic sect globally on September 10.

In Nigeria, Shiites members under the umbrella of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN), against the police restricting order, held its Ashura mourning procession in Abuja.

In Abuja, Nigeria’s capital city, Shiites members including men, women, and children began the procession around 8:00 am from Berger Roundabout to Wuse, where they concluded the exercise.

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The procession which only lasted for about 30 minutes, causes traffic gridlock in the commercial area of the Abuja city.

Also, in southern Beirut, thousands of people, carrying yellow flags of the militant Lebanese Hezbollah group, rallied in the group’s stronghold where two Israeli drones crashed late last month, further raising the potential for conflict in the region.

The somber day commemorates the killing of the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson, the Imam Hussein, by a rival Muslim faction in Karbala in present-day Iraq, in 680 A.D. Hussein and his descendants are seen by Shiites as the rightful heirs to the prophet. Hussein’s killing has been attributed with cementing the schism between Shiite and Sunni Islam.

In Iraq, hundreds of thousands held Ashoura processions amid beefed-up security in Karbala and the capital, Baghdad, marching through the streets. Many of the faithful beat their chests and lashed themselves with chains in a symbolic expression of regret for not being able to help Hussein before his martyrdom.

In recent years, Ashoura processions have been attacked by extremist Sunni militants.

On Sunday night, thousands marched toward the holy shrine of Imam Hussein, which had been lit up on the eve of the celebration.

This year’s commemoration comes amid rising tensions in the Middle East and the crisis between Iran and the U.S. and its ally Israel in the wake of the collapsing nuclear deal between Tehran and world powers.

Israel has recently expanded its war on Iran and its allies in the region and is believed to have struck targets as far out as Iraq in recent weeks, drawing outrage and pledges of retaliation.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said last month that Iran has no immunity anywhere and that the Israeli military forces “will act — and currently are acting — against them.”

On Monday, planes targeted posts belonging to Iranian-backed militias in eastern Syria, near the Iraqi border — the latest in such attacks across the region. There were conflicting reports on what exactly was targeted and how many people were killed.

The Syrian government on Monday said Israeli planes targeted a military camp that was being set up for the Syrian military and its allies. It blamed the U.S., and said the attack “crossed all red lines.”

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