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Iraqi men carry the coffin of an anti-government protester, who was killed the day before during clashes with the security forces guarding the heavily-fortified Green Zone compound, during his funeral in Iraq's holy city of Najaf on May 21, 2016. Supporters of Supporters of Iraqi cleric Moqtada al-Sadr stormed the premier's office after breaking into the Green Zone for the second time in three weeks, further escalating a long-running political crisis. Sadr followers have been protesting for weeks demanding reforms and a new government, and had warned they would again break into the Green Zone if progress was not made. / AFP / HAIDAR HAMDANI Image Credit: AFP

Baghdad: Hundreds of mourners gathered in Baghdad’s Sadr City as families held funerals on Saturday for two people killed in protests a day earlier. The coffins for the two men were hoisted above the crowds before being driven to the holy city of Najaf for burial.

The men — Hussain Hasab, 21, and Haider Hassan, 43 — died of gunshot wounds Friday after thousands, mostly supporters of powerful Shiite cleric Moqtada Al Sadr, surged up to the walls of Baghdad’s highly fortified Green Zone compound. Hasab was shot in the head.

Mourners chanted against corruption and in support of government reform. “Our demonstration is peaceful,” yelled the crowd, “long Live Al Sadr!”

Their coffins bore the insignia of Saraya Salam, the militia loyal to Al Sadr previously known as the Mahdi Army. Al Sadr’s militia fighters were also present at the funerals. Al Sadr’s office said the men were there to maintain security and protect against the threat of Daesh group attacks.

On Friday, security forces fired tear gas and live ammunition at a crowd of mostly Al Sadr supporters when hundreds breached the compound and entered the Prime Minister’s offices and Parliament.

Police and hospital officials said the clashes left more than a hundred protesters injured, five seriously. A handful of members of the security forces were also injured with knife wounds, according to a statement from Iraq’s military.

Friday’s breach was the second time in a month that protesters managed to overrun the compound that’s home to most of Iraq’s ministries and foreign embassies.

The Green Zone breach ratchets up the pressure on an Iraqi government that remains gridlocked amid the political crisis. Since the Green Zone was overrun last month, Parliament has been unable to convene. Many lawmakers are boycotting sessions citing security concerns. This leaves Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi without the ability to pass legislation and unable to implement the government reforms that Al Sadr and his supporters say the protests are demanding.

President Barack Obama and Al Abadi spoke by phone and “agreed on the critical importance of improving the security” of Baghdad and the Green Zone, emphasising the “importance of continued dialogue among all parties in Iraq,” according to a White House statement Saturday. It added that the two leaders also discussed progress being made in the campaign against the Islamic State group.

Iraq is struggling to contain a security crisis in the midst of the political disarray.

A wave of bombings in and around Baghdad killed more than 200 Iraqis in a single week and wounded hundreds more. The deadliest attacks were claimed by Daesh, whom Iraqi ground forces continue to fight on front-lines in the country’s west and north. Despite a string of territorial losses, the extremist group remains capable of carrying out deadly attacks deep inside Iraqi government-controlled territory.

On Saturday, a suicide bombing in Dujail, 80 kilometres miles north of Baghdad targeting a government complex killed four and wounded 10, according to hospital and police officials. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorised to release information.