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Pro Democracy protests in Bahrain | News & Discussions

August 18, 2013

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The scene of a blast in Muharraq, Bahrain on August 17, 2013.



Bahrain village blast injures 5 policemen

Blast occurs ten days ahead of national dialogue on peace and security

Five policemen were injured, including two seriously, when a homemade bomb went off in a village on the island of Muharraq, north of the capital Manama.

The blast occurred on Saturday evening when the policemen were dealing with a “terrorist group at the entrance of Dair village,” said the head of the police in the Governorate of Muharraq.

The blast occurred ten days before a national dialogue on peace and security in the country.

Twenty-seven delegates from two political coalitions, the parliament and the government are expected to join the talks.

Bahrain village blast injures 5 policemen | GulfNews.com
 
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Soon those terrorists will get caught, and hold accountable for everything they did.
 
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Bahrain gripped by renewed protests


19 August 2013

There have been continuing demonstrations calling for political reform across Bahrain for the past several days, under conditions of virtual martial law and lockdown.

The authorities broke up demonstrations on August 14 with tear gas and birdshot, arresting at least 13 demonstrators. According to the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, an organisation based in Manama, a large number of foreign mercenaries from Jordan and Pakistan aided government troops, firing tear gas and pepper spray indiscriminately.


The protests testify to the socially explosive tensions, not just in Bahrain but throughout the Gulf petro-monarchies in the wake of the Egyptian revolution.

It can hardly be a coincidence that the extraordinary measures taken by Bahrain’s ruling family occurred at the same time as the massacre carried out by the military junta in Egypt. They were clearly born out of great fear and a sense of vulnerability about the prospects for the very survival of the Gulf States in the aftermath of the Tunisian and Egyptian revolutions. There is evidence that the repression was coordinated through the Gulf Cooperation Council—made up of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Oman—with input from Washington.

On Friday, Bahraini security forces attacked prisoners in the Dry Docks Prison, using batons, tear gas, pepper spray and stun grenades, injuring at least 40 inmates. Most of the inmates are anti-regime protesters charged with fraudulent terrorism offences, who face harsh conditions.

The small Persian Gulf island nation, home to 1.35 million people, hosts the United States Fifth fleet, which serves to protect the Gulf States’ rulers and provide a launching pad in support of Washington’s predatory interests in the oil rich region. Bahrain’s King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa joined Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates in welcoming the military coup in Egypt.

Various groups of young activists formed a loose coalition named the Bahrain Tamarod (rebellion) on July 3, taking their name from the Egyptian movement that supported the military overthrow of Mohamed Mursi’s Muslim Brotherhood-led government. Tamarod used social media web sites to organise a series of peaceful anti-government demonstrations starting August 14. It called for a campaign of civil disobedience to push for a “free and democratic Bahrain,” including for businesses to close and rallies and demonstrations in the Seef district in the capital Manama and the impoverished villages that are home to Bahrain’s Shia population, which makes up 70 percent of Bahrain’s citizenry.

Unlike its Egyptian counterpart, however, Bahrain’s Tamarod does not enjoy the backing of the military nor a tacit endorsement for regime change from the United States.

One of the protests was planned near the US embassy in order to call on Washington to use its influence to prevent a government crackdown and protect demonstrations. But Bahrain and its ruling elite are, like the larger Gulf states, considered to be a key ally of Washington.

It is of some significance that the USS Nimitz aircraft carrier, one of the largest warships in the world, moved into Bahrain, with the USS Truman close by, ostensibly as part of its new nine-month deployment to the Persian Gulf, just days ahead of August 14.

While Bahrain’s Shi’ite-majority have long suffered discrimination and more impoverished conditions, the February 2011 protests were not primarily based on sectarian, but rather social grievances. However, the Bahraini authorities, and their counterparts in the Gulf States and Saudi Arabia, where similarly impoverished Shi’ites predominate in the oil-producing eastern region, stoked up sectarian tensions in order to prevent a unified working class opposition to the ruling clique. They asserted—without producing any evidence—that Iran was playing a critical role in promoting the dissent in order to undermine popular support for domestic protest. Heightened tensions with Iran also serve to secure the backing of their patrons, Washington and Riyadh.

At the end of July, King Hamad responded to Tamarod’s calls for protests by issuing decrees, recommended by the government-dominated parliament:

* banning almost all “demonstrations, marches, assemblies and sit-ins” in the capital;

* imposing tougher penalties for “terrorism,” the term the government—like the military junta in Egypt—uses for all forms of political dissent;

* threatening parents with being jailed if their children participate in protests;

* enabling the revocation of Bahraini citizenship from anyone who “commits or incites an act of terrorism” and freezing his or her bank account, a measure aimed at intimidating protesters’ families;

* stiffer penalties for anyone “propagating false information about Bahrain in social media network” and finally;

* taking “all possible measures to impose peace and security, even if it means imposing a state of national state of emergency.”

Many of these measures have already been in place for some time, with 31 Bahrainis stripped of their citizenship in November 2012 and a de facto ban on demonstrations having been imposed in the capital.

The government escalated its crackdown, arresting photographers and journalists, denying visas to foreign journalists wanting to cover the August 14 demonstrations, entry into the country to political activists, and deporting an American teacher due to her “radical writing”. More than 100 house raids and arrests of up to 500 activists have been carried out in the last month alone.

Following several small anti-government protests on August 12 when security forces fired tear gas and stun grenades and arrested nine demonstrators, Prime Minister Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa, a member of the ruling family, said, “The government will forcefully confront the suspicious calls to violate law and order and those who stand behind them”. He was as good as his word.

The government installed barbed wire in a number of districts where protests were expected, turning them into vast cages for their inhabitants, and deployed armoured vehicles at major intersections to prevent protesters reaching Manama.

All this was done in consultation with the other Gulf States, with Bahrain’s state-controlled news agency reporting that talks had been held with the commander of Peninsula Shield Force, the military arm of the Gulf Cooperation Council that suppressed the 2011 protests.

August 14 was chosen as the start of a series of protests because it marked the anniversary of Bahrain’s independence from Britain in 1971 and two-and-a-half years since the uprising that began in the capital Manama’s Pearl Roundabout against the ruling al-Khalifa Sunni dynasty.

Those protests were brutally suppressed by Bahraini security forces, which cleared the roundabout and sent in tanks after just three days. When the demonstrators returned and continued a peaceful occupation, the ruling clique turned for support to the Gulf Cooperation Council, whose troops poured across the causeway from Saudi Arabia. The encampment was bulldozed and its tents set on fire, while the iconic monument at the roundabout’s centre was torn down.

Since February 2011, at least 80 people have been killed by security forces, while hundreds more have been arrested, subjected to torture and military trials and then imprisoned for opposing the regime. The prisoners include doctors and nurses who were punished solely for treating those wounded by the security forces in the crushing of the Pearl Roundabout protests. Hundreds of people who took part in the protests were sacked and replaced by expatriate workers.

Earlier this year, Bahrain’s high court upheld sentences handed down by military tribunals against 13 leaders of the 2011 movement, some of whom were given life in prison. Since then, tensions have continued to simmer, with regular demonstrations in the impoverished Shi’ite villages.




Bahrain gripped by renewed protests - World Socialist Web Site
 
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Bahrain gripped by renewed protests




On Friday, Bahraini security forces attacked prisoners in the Dry Docks Prison, using batons, tear gas, pepper spray and stun grenades, injuring at least 40 inmates. Most of the inmates are anti-regime protesters charged with fraudulent terrorism offences, who face harsh conditions.

18/08/2013

Suspects of the Dry Dock Detainees’ Case Quizzed

Acting Chief Prosecutor of the Muharraq Governorate Hussain Mirza Khamis said that investigations into the case of a group of detainees remanded in custody who assaulted a number of policemen in the Dry Dock detention centre and vandalized its facilities continued today.

He said the eight assaulted policemen said that they had discovered mobile phones in one of the cells, and when they confiscated them, along with a police officer, detainees attacked them and caused them various injuries, forced some doors open, damaged some electric appliances and put them into the water they had poured into corridors in an attempt to Electroshock them, but the policemen cut electricity and restored order.

He added that four suspects were quizzed, and were accused of resisting authorities, assaulting on-duty public employees, and damaging of public property deliberately, and ordered to remand them in custody pending investigation.

He said the other defendants would be quizzed, adding that a forensic expert will examine the victims.

Bahrain News Agency | Suspects of the Dry Dock Detainees
 
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18/08/2013

Dair Explosion Suspects Court Hearing Adjourned

The fourth Supreme Criminal Court adjourned the case of four suspects accused of attempted murder of an Asian Worker to tomorrow’s session to listen to the Defence witnesses of the first defendant.

The four suspects are accused of blowing up a home-made bomb on March 17 in Dair, opposite Dair Primary School for Boys, near a shop repairing children’s bikes.

An Asian worker sustained serious injuries in his left hand when the home-made bomb went off while he was carrying it and had three fingers amputated later as he was receiving medical treatment at the hospital.

The Public Prosecution referred the suspects to the court after charging them with attempted murder as well as making, possessing and blowing up a home-made bomb for a terror purpose.

Bahrain News Agency | Dair Explosion Suspects Court Hearing Adjourned
 
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Bahrain gripped by renewed protests

The government escalated its crackdown, arresting photographers and journalists, denying visas to foreign journalists wanting to cover the August 14 demonstrations, entry into the country to political activists, and deporting an American teacher due to her “radical writing”. More than 100 house raids and arrests of up to 500 activists have been carried out in the last month alone.

August 11, 2013

Bahrain deports US teacher over ‘radical’ links

The ministry said she also wrote for the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights

Bahrain says it has deported a US citizen teaching there over her “radical” writings on Twitter and websites.

A statement on Saturday from the Ministry of State for Communications said the teacher published articles about Bahrain that “were deemed to incite hatred against the government and members of the royal family”.

The ministry said the woman, whom it did not identify, also violated the terms of her work permit by working illegally as an unaccredited journalist.

The ministry said she also wrote for the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights.

Bahrain deports US teacher over

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August 11, 2013

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A picture posted on Twitter by Minister Shaikh Fawaz Bin Mohammad Al Khalifa shows the teacher’s bedroom with the yellow flag of Hezbollah.



Bahrain deports US teacher for working as ‘unaccredited journalist’

Minister charges teacher with inciting sectarianism and writing ‘anti-Bahrain articles’

Manama has deported a US citizen over her “anti-Bahrain articles” and “publishing articles on media sites linked with Hezbollah”, the militant group in Lebanon.

The Ministry of State for Communications charged that the US woman that it did not name incited sectarianism in the country where she was working as a teacher in a nursery school in the posh area of Riffa, south of the capital Manama.

Reports named the woman as Erin Kilbride and referred to her as the “co-editor of Yemen and Gulf States pages” of a website. She was described as a “researcher and teacher currently based in Bahrain” who “has lived and travelled through the Middle East”.

She reportedly holds a bachelor’s degree in Women and Gender Studies and Arabic Language from Georgetown University.

In a social network for business, Kilbride introduced herself as a “research assistant” in a think tank. She said that she “tracks foreign and domestic security developments, amalgamating key events to create timelines for the Armed Conflict Database”, and that she “manages and updates the Yemen, Lebanon, Israel/Palestine, Sahel, and International Terrorism sections of the Armed Conflict Database.”

The Ministry of State for Communications said that its investigation team probing the “suspicious activities of the US citizen on the internet” found out that she had broken the Bahraini labour and immigration laws by working as an “unaccredited journalist”.

“In compliance with the law and in coordination with the other concerned ministries, her visa was cancelled and she was deported from the country,” the ministry said in a statement.

Shaikh Fawaz Bin Mohammad Al Khalifa, the minister, on his Twitter account thanked the investigation team for their efforts and posted a picture of the teacher’s bedroom showing the yellow flag of Hezbollah. The minister said that the US citizen wrote articles for a “banned Bahraini organisation” and for a Lebanese publication.

Bahrain in May banned all contacts and communication with the Lebanese group, saying that it was a terrorist organisation.

Bahrain deports US teacher for working as

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Very interested to hear from Iraniain Shia prespective on Human Rights violations in so called Shia - Iran and how they differ from the ones committed in Bahrain agaisnt shias.
 
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Tamarod Bahrain Resilient In Face of Government Crackdown


Bahraini dissidents reacted favorably to the Tamarod Bahrain (Bahrain Rebellion) campaign, which was announced at the beginning of July and officially launched on Aug. 14, 2013. But the state reacted with troubling and violent measures, as it adopted new laws that limit personal liberties and freedom of expression, ban demonstrations, threaten to strip people of their citizenship and impose harsh sentences on opposition members. That state also deployed a heavy security presence in all areas, villages and alleyways, thus making demonstrating on the ground an act fraught with great difficulties.


Following the enactment by King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa of a law prohibiting demonstrations and congregation in the capital, Manama, campaign organizers announced that their destination continues to be the capital, and that their movement would remain open without it being confined to a certain hour or day.

In this regard, the spokesman for the Tamarod Bahrain Movement, Hussein Youssef, told As-Safir: “Aug. 14 marked the launch of a political project that will endure no matter how complicated the security situation becomes, because our reliance is on the strategy of popular street action, which does not end even if the movement’s leadership is arrested.”

Youssef affirmed that the campaign is organizing “an open planning session to study the opportunities and challenges and arrange new popular measures that would drain the dictatorial regime’s security and political resources. It would minimize as much as possible human and material losses by relying on peaceful action.”

In a response to official Bahraini media sources and reporting that described what occurred on Aug. 14 as having culminated in failure, Youssef said, “Those who said that the Aug. 14 street movement was a failure did not accurately assess the achievements [made that day]. Through the launch of this movement, we succeeded in transforming Aug. 14 into a national holiday. Whoever reviews what occurred on that and following days will conclude that the campaign fully controlled the size of the demonstrations and consequent deployment of security forces to certain areas by making prior announcements about these demonstrations, while embarking on demonstrations and rallies that were only announced after they started in other areas. The campaign also succeeded in implementing a wide-ranging voluntary civil disobedience movement by the proprietors of small- and medium-sized commercial enterprises.”

Youssef said organizing 120 demonstrations in various areas, where the participants all complied with the established tactics and instructions, and the fact that no deaths were registered despite the aggressiveness and mobilization of heavily armed security forces is also considered a success. He added, “The country is now completely paralyzed and Bahrain was put under a media microscope throughout the 40 days that preceded the launch of the campaign, which continues on today. The regime is in a state of unprecedented political and security hysteria, with its attempts to garner international condemnation against the campaign having all resulted in failure.”

Youssef opined that the campaign succeeded in reaching out to all opposition groups, as well as some political sympathizers, which restored vigor and vitality to the street movement.

Further elaborating on the achievements of the Tamarod Bahrain Movement, Youssef said, “Beginning with the preparations that preceded it, and all the way to its launch, the campaign’s successes can be divided into four main categories: political, in the media, on the streets and morale. Tamarod also instituted a radical shift in the way peaceful street movements are organized, thus pushing national opposition forces into re-evaluating the strategies used during peaceful actions.”

It should be mentioned that in addition to Tamarod Bahrain’s calls for demonstrations and social disobedience, other Bahraini opposition political organizations also rose to support the right to peacefully demonstrate and condemned attacks perpetrated against demonstrators. Furthermore, the Feb. 14 Youth Coalition called for sit-ins and demonstrations to be organized in support of and in coordination with Tamarod Bahrain throughout the country’s villages and regions


Read more: Tamarod Bahrain Resilient In Face of Government Crackdown - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East
 
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29/08/2013

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Cache of Firebombs Discovered at Al-Nabeeh Saleh School

Terrorists are escalating their campaign of sabotage against educational establishments.

Security guards have today discovered a large cache of firebombs stocked at Al-Nabeeh Saleh Primary School for Girls to be used in terror acts.

The Education Ministry described the act as a dangerous escalation as part of the systematic campaign targeting schools.

Terrorists conducted 206 attacks against schools across the Kingdom of Bahrain, using Molotov cocktail firebomb.

Terrorists are now stepping up their campaign against schools, trying to turn educational establishments into centres to stock firebombs.

The Directorate of Public Relations and media strong condemned the criminal acts perpetrated against educational establishment while the ministry is sparing no effort revamp school and ensure necessary maintenance for the new academic year, including the building of additional multipurpose blocs.

In a statement today, the directorate condemned the terror acts as contravening international covenants and norms which stress the need to steer educational establishments from any acts of sabotage.

It pointed out that the official authorities are undertaking the necessary measures in this regard to protect educational establishments.

http://www.bna.bh/portal/en/news/577395

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30/08/2013

Four Policemen Hurt in Terror Blast

Four on-duty policemen suffered minor injuries when a car exploded in Sehla last night, Northern Police director-general said.

The explosion occurred at around 10pm when the policemen were trying to clear blocked roads. The car bomb was triggered by remote control, police said.

The security forces launched a manhunt to identify the perpetrators and bring them to justice. The Public Prosecution has been notified.

Bahrain News Agency | Four Policemen Hurt in Terror Blast
 
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Thousands of Bahrainis hold fresh anti-regime rally


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Tens of thousands of Bahraini people have taken to the streets near the capital Manama in a fresh protest rally against the decades-long rule of the Al Khalifa royal family.

The protest took place on Friday in the Shiite village of Jad Fahs where anti-regime protesters chanted slogans against the “dictatorship.”

The protesters also demanded “democratic changes” in the Persian Gulf kingdom.

The protest came a day after a bomb blast rocked a Shia Muslim village near Manama, injuring at least four policemen.

According to a statement released by the country’s Interior Ministry on Friday, the explosion took place on Thursday night in the village of Sahla, about 8.5 kilometers (5 miles) west of Manama.

Describing the blast as ‘an act of terror’, the statement also added that an investigation had been launched into the attack.

No group has claimed responsibility for the bombing.

On August 17, five Bahraini police officers were wounded in a homemade bomb explosion in the Persian Gulf country.

According to Interior Ministry, the attack was carried out in al-Diar area on the island of Muharraq, northeast of the capital.

Bahrainis have been staging demonstrations since mid-February 2011, demanding political reform and a constitutional monarchy. However, the demand changed to an outright call for the ouster of the ruling Al Khalifa regime following its brutal crackdown on popular protests.

Scores have been killed, many of them under torture while in custody, and thousands more detained since the popular uprising began.

Protesters say they will continue holding anti-regime demonstrations until their demand for the establishment of a democratically-elected government and an end to rights violations are met.


PressTV - Thousands of Bahrainis hold fresh anti-regime rally
 
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29/08/2013

4th High Criminal Court adjourns Imam Army case

The Fourth High Criminal Court, presided by Judge Ali bin Khalifa Al-Dhahrani, membership of Sheikh Hamad bin Salman Al Khalifa and Jassim Al-Ajlan and Secretary Abdullah Mohammed, decided to adjourn the case of the accused of the formation of a terror cell under the name of (Imam Army) to the next meeting of September 22 for the final pleading session and allowing the new lawyers a copy of the case papers, following the withdrawal of the some lawyers from the case during the previous session.

Defense witnesses, at yesterday’s hearing, said the financial transfers made by the defendants were for the purpose of trade.

Prosecution witness said, in yesterday’s hearing, the defendants had planned to target Sheikh Isa Air Base, the Ministry of Interior and other sensitive sites in the country, he pointed the involvement of one of the security men in this case, whom is currently at large, whose role was to receive and secure accommodation in the Sultanate of Oman for people on their way to Iran.

In last February, Public Security Chief, Major General Tariq Al-Hassan had announced that the National Security Agency received security intelligence information that reported a group of individuals seeking the formation of a terrorist cell under the name of the Army of Imam aimed at attacking sensitive civilian and military sites as well as official figures.

He explained the information revealed that the terrorist cell comprised of Bahraini individuals live in the country and others living abroad, in addition to a number of individuals of other nationalities, and that there are 4 accused still at large.

He added they received training on the use of weapons, high explosives, means of collecting information, filming of locations and recruitment coordination, in Iran by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards and in Iraq by the Iraqi Hezbollah, and the total financial support the terrorist cell received was approximately $80 thousand.

Bahrain News Agency | 4th High Criminal Court adjourns Imam Army case
 
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