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Bahrain Protests: King Hamad Mocks Opponents' 'Bad Manners' Amid Violence (PHOTOS)

Bahrain Protests

First Posted: 02/12/2012 3:24 pm Updated: 02/12/2012 11:59 pm


By Andrew Hammond

MAMAMA, Feb 12 (Reuters) - Bahraini riot police engaged in pitched battles with petrol-bomb throwing youths on Sunday as violence escalated ahead of the Feb. 14 anniversary of an uprising last year, while King Hamad mocked the opposition for its "bad manners".

Teenagers blocked off streets in the village of Sanabis, taunting police as "cowards" and "mercenaries" because some are thought to be Pakistani or Yemeni. A policeman shouted to people to get indoors. "This gathering is illegal," he said.

One teenager lobbed four petrol bombs some 30 metres towards a group of police, who responded with a volley of sound grenades and teargas. Shops were mostly locked up in the district, which was riddled with blocked roads and anti-government graffiti.

Bahrainis, mostly from the Shi'ite majority, initially took to the streets last February, inspired by uprisings in other Arab states, but the government imposed martial law and stamped out the unrest in the March with the help of Saudi troops.

Demonstrations began again after the emergency law was lifted in June and are escalating before the anniversary of the 2011 protests.

Bahrain is an ally of the United States and home base to the U.S. Navy's vast Fifth Fleet which patrols the Gulf. It is ruled by a Sunni Muslim royal family, but most of its people are Shi'ites, placing it on the faultline of regional influence between Sunni power Saudi Arabia and Shi'ite Iran.

The ruling Al Khalifa family accuses Iran of fomenting the uprising. Tehran denies playing a role, and Bahrain's Shi'ite groups deny they receive support from abroad.

In an interview with Germany's Der Spiegel magazine, the king accused his opponents of chanting in support of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

"It's just a case of manners. But when they shout 'Down with the king and up with Khamenei' that's a problem for national unity," the magazine quoted Hamad as saying in extracts of an interview, the rest of which would be published on Monday.

The refrain "Down with Hamad", sounded by trumpets and car horns and chanted at rallies, has become a rallying call of opposition protests. Reuters journalists have not witnessed the opposition chanting in support of Khamenei.

"In a sense there is no 'opposition' in Bahrain, as the phrase implies one unified block with the same views," Hamad said in the extracts. "Such a phrase is not in our constitution, unlike say the United Kingdom. We only have people with different views, and that's okay."


VIOLENT CLASHES

Opposition actions have involved marches organised by opposition parties with government approval, as well as street protests called by activists online under the title Feb. 14 Youth Coalition, which usually result in clashes with police.

One of the activists, bearing a large rock and masking his face with a scarf, said the clashes were a result of police action against peaceful protests.

"Today we sat outside our homes as a peaceful method of protest. Then the repression by these Khalifa forces began," he said. "So we have to confront them. It was before our houses. They are the ones who came in their cars."

The government says such clashes are acts of hooliganism by youth who put police and other Bahrainis' lives in danger. Police say they must act to restore law and order.

"People have come to the conclusion that the opposition only want to bring unrest to the country. They are not serious about any goals," said Jamal Fakhro, deputy head of the appointed house of parliament.

After last year's demonstrations, the government demolished a sculpture at the Pearl Roundabout, a landmark traffic junction that had been occupied by protesters for a month. Security forces are determined not to let protesters return to the site.

Leading activist Nabeel Rajab led several hundred people in an attempted march to the roundabout on Saturday, which ended with the arrest of two American activists, who were deported on Sunday. Rajab staged a smaller walk to the roundabout with his family on Sunday, reaching the edge of the heavily guarded zone where security forces fired tear gas to disperse the group.

"This is a continuous protest," he said, walking back with his 9-year-old daughter, who appeared distressed from the effects of the teargas. "There will not be one central protest with thousands of people, it will be all over."

Zainab al-Khawaja, daughter of rights activist Abdulhadi al-Khawaja, one of 14 prominent figures in last year's protests who are in prison, was detained by police for also attempting to walk into the roundabout with a small group of activists.

Mainly Shi'ite opposition parties are demanding Bahrain's elected parliament be given the power to form governments. Shi'ites complain of political and economic marginalisation by an entrenched elite who do not want to share power.

The government denies this and says it is making reforms such as giving an elected chamber more powers of scrutiny over ministers and budgets.

In his interview, Hamad defended last year's martial law, which he said was intended to protect women and expatriates from attack: "Also our women were very scared and it is the duty of a gentleman to protect women, so I had to protect them."

Thirty-five people died by the time martial law ended, including protesters, police, Shi'ite detainees and foreigners. The ongoing clashes have taken the death toll above 60, although the government disputes the causes of death of many.

The king also said he called in Gulf military help, mainly in the form of Saudi troops, to protect Bahrain's "strategic installations... in case Iran would be more aggressive".

Despite dealing firmly with its own protests, Bahrain has been one of the Gulf Arab countries leading the Arab League in opposing Syria's Bashar al-Assad, an ally of Iran. The Arab League voted on Sunday to back the Syrian opposition's uprising against Assad, and to call for U.N. peacekeepers in Syria.

"The best advice for him is from the Syrian people," Spiegel quoted Hamad as saying of Assad. (Editing by Peter Graff)

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Bahrainis carry national flags and pictures of jailed opposition leaders as they chant anti-government slogans during an opposition march Friday, Feb. 10, 2012, in Miqsha, Bahrain. Tens of thousands of anti-government protesters in Bahrain streamed toward a site they seek to occupy for the one-year anniversary of their uprising in the Gulf island kingdom. The banner in front reads: "We demand an elected government," and another reads "Khalifa equals racial discrimination," referring to the long-serving prime minister. (AP)
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By Andrew Hammond MAMAMA, Feb 12 (Reuters) - Bahraini riot police engaged in pitched battles with petrol-bomb throwing youths on Sunday as violence escalated ahead of the Feb. 14 anni...
By Andrew Hammond MAMAMA, Feb 12 (Reuters) - Bahraini riot police engaged in pitched battles with petrol-bomb throwing youths on Sunday as violence escalated ahead of the Feb. 14 anni...
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jenniferkizzy
zombie chick
03:55 AM on 03/30/2012
the middle east is way more active than i remember when i was little this was the place too fear and yes bahrain is in the middle east so yeah see ya bye don't pm and say you don't bing or google it you couch nerd's
jenniferkizzy
zombie chick
03:53 AM on 03/30/2012
sheer insanity despotism at it's finest
05:54 AM on 02/14/2012
How come my comment does not get posted?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
C Karen Stopford
10:24 PM on 02/13/2012
The reason we are allowing this to happen is that because, like Iran, the repressed majority is Shia, and we hate them for wanting to run their own country. We will do anything to keep a despised leader in power if he goes along with what the US wants. Amnesty International and others have been reporting ongoing torture and other human rights abuses in Bahrain, but we park our fleet there and give the king the ol' high five for keeping the population quiet (with the help of the Saudis, who are all to happy to oblige).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lisakclayton
01:21 PM on 02/13/2012
When the calls go for hanging and killing, one must wonder what Human Rights some people are advocating.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:53 AM on 02/13/2012
http://chanad.posterous.com/73487625

here you can see which firms are paid by the regime to fool Western public opinions

Hamad is an absolute and bloody monarch whose family drains the wealth of the kingdom leaving most of the population aside in poverty, a monarchy without any legitimacy which stands because of Saudi and American support
05:11 AM on 02/13/2012
You have it completely wrong about King Hamad's perspective on the protests. If you bothered to read the full interview with him you would see that he actually praised differences of opinion in Bahrain and merely said there is not united opposition. Which is true! There are both Sunni and Shi'a who want to see changes in this country. And King Hamad is committed to continuing reforms.
08:44 AM on 02/13/2012
He can continue his reforms from the end of a rope along with the rest of the House of Saud.

World freedom goes through Riyadh.
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C Karen Stopford
10:21 PM on 02/13/2012
And how much has he paid you to write this?
longtimegone
my micro-bio remains empty
03:03 AM on 02/13/2012
It would seem that "bad manners' are breaking out world-wide. If it's one thing the ruling global elite hate it's bad manners!
03:02 AM on 02/13/2012
Can't wait to see his head on a stake.
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02:52 AM on 02/13/2012
Americans support democracy until it might cost them $.25 more at the pump. :))))
12:08 AM on 02/13/2012
This is why the right wing of Israel is trying to push us into military actions against Iran and continued alienation of the Shi'ite faith. In my opinion, Israel's greatest fear is progressive, western friendly Shi'ite leadership that could weaken their hold on American politics. Our support should be going to oppressed people, not to oppressors, which would make us more friendly to a true Palestinian homeland. Sure, during the Cold War it was easier to buy dictators/monarchs like Saudi royal family, Noreiga, Marcos and the Shah but in the long run it has proven to be detrimental to our world image and diametrically opposed to our role as leaders of a free world.
12:01 AM on 02/13/2012
oh HUFFPOST finally coverts something not " Iran or Syria " from the middle east.
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KarmaPatrol
Fair and balanced and sugar-free
12:00 AM on 02/13/2012
Man, everyone is rioting nowadays.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richard Pearce banned
Never let them tell you it can't be done.
11:20 PM on 02/12/2012
Of course, without the wall to wall coverage of the dictator's goons attacking peaceful protest after peaceful protest, the funerals for those killed in those attacks, the funerals for the victims of the dictator's torturers, reporting that some of the citizens who are protesting being the oppressed subjects of a dictator have started protecting themselves with makeshift weapons sounds a little different, doesn't it.

Compare your reaction to this story, and your reaction to the stories when the Syrians started using violence. Are you as outraged at the dictator, sympathetic with the protesters, and eager for someone to intervene to protect the protesters?

No?

That's the difference between manufacturing consent and manufacturing indifference.
schatsie
banks are more dangerous than standing armies
11:17 PM on 02/12/2012
I'll tell you what bad manners is, it is abusing your own people and then demonizing them when they have the cahones to stand up and DEMAND FOOD......not even healthcare, just plain food....