Summary
"If you kill us all, who will you rule over?" says the latest issue of Tuktuk newspaper, produced, printed and distributed by Iraqi anti-government activists to thousands of protesters camped out in Baghdad's Tahrir Square.
The newspaper, named after the three-wheeled motorcycles that have become a symbol of Iraq's protests for ferrying wounded demonstrators to makeshift medical tents, is less than a month old.
Tuktuk started as an attempt to circumvent an information blackout by authorities who shut down the internet for weeks on end, and to crystallize the demands of protests that have swept Baghdad and southern Iraq.
The protests, which began on Oct. 1 in Baghdad and quickly spread through southern Iraq, broke out over lack of jobs and services.
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