Bahrain Arrests Six Opposition Leaders after Crackdown


Bahrain Arrests Six Opposition Leaders after Crackdown

MANAMA, March 17 (Reuters) :  Bahrain arrested at least six opposition leaders on Thursday, a day after its crackdown on protests among the Shi'ite Muslim majority drew rare U.S. criticism and raised fears of a regional conflict.

State television said "leaders of the civil strife" had been arrested for communicating with foreign countries and inciting murder and destruction of property. It did not say how many had been arrested or name them.

Bahraini forces used tanks and helicopters to drive protesters off the streets and clear a camp that had become a symbol of their demand for more democratic rights in the Sunni-ruled kingdom.

Three police and three protesters died in the crackdown.

The crackdown prompted sympathy protests from Shi'ites across the region, including in oil power Saudi Arabia, and Iran has complained to the United Nations.

It asked countries in the region to join it in urging Saudi Arabia to withdraw troops from the island state, reports said.

"How could one accept a government to invite foreign military forces to suppress its own citizens," Iran's Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said in a letter to U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, also addressed to the Arab League and the Organisation of Islamic Conference.

Iran supports Shi'ite groups in Iraq and Lebanon.

Oil was up over $1 on Thursday as the Gulf tensions fuelled fears of further supply disruption while investors weighed the impact on energy demand from quake-hit Japan. Capital flight from Bahrain is starting to pressure its currency and threaten its position as a Gulf financial centre.

Most Western nations have urged their citizens to leave Bahrain, and a spokesman said the British embassy had organised charter flights to Dubai for its citizens without other options.

Protesters are asking for the monarchy to move to a parliamentary system where cabinet is made up of elected officials, though some want a republican system. Government is at present appointed by the king and parliament has few powers.

The opposition say the current system is designed to water down the influence of Shi'ite Muslims, who say they are discriminated against in jobs, housing and politics. The government denies this.

Pearl roundabout was a scene of devastation. Some tattered tents remained on the grass as diggers uprooted palm trees that surrounded the pearl statue where activists had been celebrating into the night only days before.

Troops were only allowing residents in and a long line of cars was backed up behind a checkpoint, waving through drivers heading to work in the financial district, where the protesters had tried to extend their sit-in early this week.

The military on Wednesday banned all protests and imposed a curfew from 4 p.m. to 4 a.m. across a large swathe of Manama.

Mansoor Al-Jamri, editor of main opposition newspaper Al-Wasat, said plainclothes men with weapons were in the streets around his offices, holding up the paper's production.

"We are trying to get in contact with the ministry of interior to give us protection against the thugs," he said.








OPPOSITION DETAINED

Among those detained overnight were Haq leader Hassan Mushaima and Wafa leader Abdel Wahhab Hussein, who had led calls for the overthrow of the royal family, the largest opposition party Wefaq said.

More moderate Wefaq had limited its demands to wide-ranging political and constitutional reform. Also arrested was Ibrahim Sharif, head of the secular leftist party Waad that signed up to the same demands as Wefaq.

"Two of the thugs climbed over the fence to get in our yard, one went over and pointed a gun in Ibrahim's face and the other went to our garage to let everyone else in," Farida Ismail, Sharif's wife, told Reuters by telephone. "They were going around, wrecking things in the house."

The interior ministry could not immediately be reached for comment and the charges against those arrested were not known.

In Geneva, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay urged Bahrain on Thursday to rein in its security forces, citing allegations that they had killed, beaten and carried out arbitrary arrests of protesters, and attacked medical workers.

She voiced alarm at what she called the illegal "military takeover of hospitals" in the kingdom".

"This is shocking and illegal conduct," Pillay, a former U.N. war crimes judge, said in a statement.

The unrest has brought an influx of troops to Bahrain from Sunni-ruled neighbours Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which fear the uprising that began last month could play into the hands of non-Arab Shi'ite power Iran.

Kuwait, which has an Shi'ite minority, has not sent any troops. Neither has Qatar or Oman.

U.S. President Barack Obama called the kings of Saudi Arabia, a strategic ally of Washington in the Middle East, and of Bahrain, home to the U.S. Navy's Fifth Fleet and seen as a bulwark against Iranian influence, to urge "maximum" restraint.

But the violence appeared to dash hopes for political talks Washington hopes will take place.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said force was not the answer and that Bahrain and Gulf countries who sent in troops to back the Sunni royals were "on the wrong track". A medical source said dozens of people were taken to Bahrain International Hospital on Wednesday, hit by rubber bullets or shotgun pellets or suffering teargas inhalation -- all weapons used by riot police. One was hit by a live bullet.

Protesters threw rocks and petrol bombs at police who were clearing the protest camp and killed three by running them over in cars at high speed, witnesses and medical sources said.

SHI'ITE ANGER

Over 60 percent of Bahrainis are Shi'ites. Most say they want only the same treatment as Sunnis and a constitutional monarchy but calls by hardliners for the overthrow of the monarchy have alarmed Sunnis, who fear the unrest serves Iran.

Analysts say the intervention of Sunni-ruled Gulf Arab states in Bahrain might provoke a response from Tehran, which supports Shi'ite groups in Iraq and Lebanon.

"This was a major and a dangerous decision because this issue has been internationalised now. There are protests in Iraq, in Iran, in Lebanon," Wefaq MP Jasim Hussein said.

The crackdown galvanised Iraq's Shi'ite community, exacerbating sectarian tension that led to years of war in Iraq. Iraq's Shi'ite prime minister criticised the assault and Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr called for protests.

In Lebanon, supporters of Shi'ite group Hezbollah came out in solidarity with their fellow Shi'ites. And Iran condemned Bahrain's response to the protests, recalling its ambassador for consultations.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said the crackdown was "unjustifiable".

Saudi Shi'ites held several demonstrations on Wednesday night, including one in their main regional centre of Qatif where major Saudi oilfields are located, demanding the release of prisoners and voicing support for Shi'ites in Bahrain.

"People were demanding the withdrawal of the Peninsula force and called on Saudi Arabia to withdraw from Bahrain," one witness said, referring to Gulf Arab forces in Bahrain.

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Comment on this article

  • Noel D Almeida, Brahmavar / Bahrain

    Fri, Mar 18 2011

    Even at this point, Bahrain is much more safe place to live than our own country. The people of Bahrain are very good, friendly and helpful than our own countrymen. I have been earning my bread in this lovely country for years and it is time for me stand with this country in its hard times. A friend in need is a friend indeed. Unfortunately, various medias have fabricated and carried a wrong picture to the world. The things are normal and much more calm compared to what is happening today in our own country / locality. The Bahrain govt. has taken right step in a professional manner to restore stability, peace and protection to the public. We expatriates must appreciate the patience of this government and thank the Royal Family and the ministries of Bahrain for their tireless efforts towards our security. Forget what US / West says. They hold umbrella where the rain falls.

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  • Shammi, Karnataka

    Fri, Mar 18 2011

    Very Good King,we support u his majesty.Lord is there with u.I was so far supporting bahraini protesters,but the moment one of the protester in Al jazeera tv said the reporter "No,we dont want religious nation like Iran n saudi Arabia,we want change in political system.I paused.May angels curse be upon those protesters who dont like Land of prophets.
    Saudi is a gr8 nation with low crime records.Long live Prophet's lands like saudi,egypt,palestine ,all GCC n also My India.

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  • majeed, Yermal

    Fri, Mar 18 2011

    KIng Khalifa should step down,People of Bahrain want democracy

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • edward, MANGALORE

    Fri, Mar 18 2011

    THIS IS JUST BEGINING THAT GCC RULERS ARE IN HOT SEAT, HOW LONG THEY CAN SUPRESS THE YOUNG BLOOD. FROM NOWONWARDS YOUNG GENERATION WILL NOT ALLOW TO THEIR RULERS RUN THE GULF COUNTRIES FOR 40-50 YEARS. THEY WILL ALSO ALLOW THEM ONLY 4-5 YEARS & ELECT NEW GOVT. BY VOTING. AND IT IS A RIPE TIME TO MODERATE THE GCC & LET THEM HAVE FREEDOM OF VOTING & ELECTION. BUT GOOD LESSON FOR INDIA, ATLEAST FROM NOW ALL INDIVIDUAL STATES SPEED-UP THE DEVELOPMENT, INFRASTRUCTURE & TO CREATE A CONDUSIVE ATMOSPHERE FOR YOUNGER GENERATION AS WELL AS PRESENT GENERATION. INFUTURE THEY SHOULD NOT MIGRATE OUT OF COUNTRY. BELEIVE ME, THERE IS NO FUTURE IN GCC AT ALL. IT IS ON HOT-SEAT & VERY TOUGH DAYS ARE AHEAD FOR NRI'S (SPECIALLY SOUTH-INDIANS). THERE IS ALWAYS HALF-BREAD IN OUR COUNTRY. SO BE CAREFUL & GET READY, THIS IS AN WAKEUP CALL FOR NRIS IN GULF.

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  • Salman Al Bahar, Manama

    Fri, Mar 18 2011

    We, all Bahraini likes our King, Rullers, Govt, People and Resident of Bahrain.
    Long Live our King Shaikh Hamad Bin Isa Al-Khalifa.

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • Sathish.S, mangalore

    Thu, Mar 17 2011

    We might see lot of foriegn workers being killed or jailed without reason.Govt of India should act fast.

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • HENRY MISQUITH, M'LORE\BAHRAIN

    Thu, Mar 17 2011

    This is the victory of His Majesty the King Hamad Bin Isa Al-Khalifa. Long live Kingdom Of Bahrain.

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