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Iraqi policemen stand guard as a demonstrator holds a poster of slain Kurdish journalist and student Sardasht Osman during a protest rally against the murder in the northern Iraqi city of Sulaimaniyah on Wednesday. Image Credit: AFP

Sulaimaniyah, Iraq:  More than a thousand Kurds poured into the streets of this northern Iraqi city on Wednesday in a growing wave of outrage, blaming authorities for the kidnapp and murder of a young Kurdish journalist.

Throngs of protesters waving banners and carrying pictures of 23-year-old Sardasht Othman marched through the city in the largest protest yet since the discovery of Othman's body on May 3. There have been nearly a dozen demonstrations over the past week in Iraq's Kurdish autonomous region calling for his killers to be brought to justice.

Othman was snatched in front of the campus of University of Salahuddin in the regional capital of Irbil, and his handcuffed and bullet-riddled body was found four days later.

"We accuse the Democratic Party and its security forces of assassinating Sardasht because they are in full control of Irbil," said writer Nabaz Goran, referring to the Kurdish party running the capital.

Protesters carried banners calling on authorities to "reveal the truth" about Othman's death, while others wore black shrouds and chanted "we want freedom."

Othman's death has drawn new attention to long-standing allegations of government-sanctioned abuse of media and freedom of expression in the self-rule region. International press watchdog groups have expressed concern over restrictions placed on journalists.

Authorities rejected any involvement in Othman's death and called on the protesters to wait for the results of an investigation.

Accusations

Accusations have particularly focused on the Kurdish Democratic Party of President Massoud Barzani. The party controls Irbil and has been accused by international rights groups of being intolerant of criticism. Goran, the writer, said he was beaten by KDP security for criticising local officials and had to flee to Sulaimaniyah, which is controlled by a rival Kurdish party.

Othman was a reporter for the biweekly Ashtiname newspaper and contributed to a number of Kurdish websites, often writing about corruption, according to the online Kurdistan Post, to which he also contributed. He reportedly had received threats over his articles.

His friends say he particularly enraged authorities with a piece he wrote for the Kurdistan Post saying the only way to become successful in such a nepotistic society would be to marry the president's daughter.

His supporters say his body was dumped outside the Kurdish region in Mosul, which has been a haven for Al Qaida in Iraq, to shift the focus away from Kurdish authorities.