Posts from — June 2011
Abo Qowa Protest 01.06
June 1, 2011 No Comments
Aldiraz Protest 01.06
June 1, 2011 No Comments
Sanabs 1-6-2011
June 1, 2011 No Comments
Barbar Protest- 01.06
June 1, 2011 No Comments
Bani Jammrahv Protest – 01 June
June 1, 2011 No Comments
Bahrain Updates #17: Attack the Messenger! Date: 05/31/2011 03:56:06 AM
Colin S. Cavell, Ph.D.
Washington and the Sunnis of Bahrain…American Studies Center
A child asks his mother:' Mom! Why did they demolish the Pearl Roundabout?
'Do you know when you play a game with a friend and you win in that game, as a result, he gets angry and stop playing with you. It is the same situation.' Replies the mother.
In such a naive way, one of the American academics, who had worked at American Studies Center in the University of Bahrain, described a state's (country) relation with its people after the events of last February. This academic, is not committed to academic ethics; however, he was a great supporter of Washington's politics , which, in its efforts, aims to find new allies in Manama. So, what did he do?! He contributed in establishing this center. This centre turned quickly to an academic centre that graduates Bahraini students specialized in the field of academic studies. The center was able to provide a great deal of in-class and out-of-class events and activities to its students that serve the goals that Washington sought to achieve in the region of gulf, particularly in Bahrain. For example, there were a series of cultural lectures that were presented by the center. Generally, the main goal of those lectures was to create a general culture (spirit, atmosphere) about the significance of democracy in accordance with the American flavor. Therefore, some of those lectures spoke about subjects that were new to Bahraini society, such as freedom of religion and thought and doctrines in democratic regimes, as well as empowering women politically. Furthermore, the center supervised the process of sending Bahraini students in scholarships to continue their studies as a part of the Fulbright Scholarship Programme in coordination with the US embassy in Bahrain. In short, the center found a valuable opportunity to intervene in the students' community at the University of Bahrain and select the ideal students that would be able to make a mark later on, and those students would have political roles that could achieve Washington's goals in the future. Also, we spoke in the past about the efforts of the American Administration to convert a number of Bahraini citizens to political as well as human rights activists. And the American Studies Center was able to do this brilliantly through direct interactions with the students and then selecting the ideal ones. It is sufficient to know that a number of kids, whose parents were involved in a plot to overthrow the political system and who are now currently in multiple trial charges, were studying in that center and some of them graduated. This is as the case with Mariam Al Khawaja who has strong ties with the operators of the center as well as with a number of officials at the US embassy in Bahrain. During their study in the American Studies Center, the Bahraini students were subjected to political speech that was different from the speeches that they can get in Bahraini society. It is because that speech has its goals and specific frameworks. It can open wider outlooks for the students themselves, particularly when the center was keen to the idea that there was a direct interaction between the students and all that is American. Therefore, there were frequent visits for the students to the aircrafts carriers in the gulf waters to inform them about the efforts of Washington in order to promote peace and security in the Arabian Gulf. This is along with other visits to the US. The issue ends with organizing an educational scholarship to complete university studies in one of the prestigious universities of America. And the final outcome is that we find some of the personalities who studied in this center move now from one university to another in the US reaching the Congress to give her human rights witness testimony as representing 'the people of Bahrain'.
Arabic link:
http://www.alwatannews.net/writer-read.aspx?id=Ju2+g7pNv8TXlYroM28HBSviKnSBtGc/Zwp5v25RT8Q=
During their study in the American Studies Center, the Bahraini students were subjected to political speech that was different from the speeches that they can get in Bahraini society. It is because that speech has its goals and specific frameworks. It can open wider outlooks for the students themselves, particularly when the center was keen to the idea that there was a direct interaction between the students and all that is American.
Readers this week called my attention to a blog article entitled "Bahrain: Are You Confused?" and dated March 25, 2011 and written by a former Fulbright recipient, a Dr. Martin Scott Catino, who briefly taught at the University of Bahrain in the American Studies Center during the second Bush era, and who now claims to be "a Senior Military Adviser in Afghanistan, a specialist in US Foreign and Security policy". In his blog article, Dr. Catino blames radical Shia extremists for Bahrain's present chaos. He asserts that these clever insurgents are utilizing guerrilla warfare tactics in an attempt to realize "their violent dreams." Catino writes: "Radical Shia Imams parading as caring pastors mixed with Shia malcontents, human rights activists, the intelligentsia, and the young and the restless who moved about in abayas and dishdashas at schools like the University of Bahrain, where Hezbollah’s Hassan Nasrallah and Iran’s Ali Khamenei were deemed champions of the world’s oppressed, and of course, of the Shia of Bahrain. These very people and groups are now key players of the insurgency taking place in Bahrain" (http://www.thoughts.com/martinscottcatino/the-insurgency-in-bahrain).Dr. Catino, of course, is entitled to his opinion about the democratic opposition and, indeed, we should welcome his contribution, for it provides us with a clear articulation of present US policy towards the six Gulf Kingdoms and, in particular, of US policy towards Bahrain, for it displays not only a disdain for the majority Shia population of Bahrain but, as well, it further evinces the same servility towards monarchy that the pro-Bush crowd exhibited during W's time in office. Catino writes of Bahrain's King as follows:King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, the ruler of Bahrain, is a powerful man, whose whit and ability to maintain control is admired, envied, and despised by the various sectarian and racial groups that walk the streets of places like Manama, the capital of Bahrain. The King is brilliant, and holds the reins of power with an ease and finesse that baffles his opponents. His ability to manage easily the diverse interests of the Sunni Arab world, the shifting sands of international economics, and the many South and Southeast Asian migrants that inhabit his island involves subtle skills that he uses confidently, grasping intangible power structures as easily as one could grasp the steering wheel of the family car. He understands every Middle Eastern leader’s most cherished secret: the most important fight is the one to stay in power. So he offers much more than crackdowns: free schooling, subsidies to the poor of his country (Shia included), and business freedoms in the local markets. In fact, the Ajam, the enterprising Persian business class of Bahrain, embrace this freedom. But more importantly they embrace the freedom to stay out of politics, which dampens the delights of the dinar.
It is all-too-often that some self-professed conservatives in the USA proclaim their love of liberty in one moment while in the next subjugating themselves to monied interests who are determined to crush the very liberty by which they speak. This, of course, is compounded when such persons claim to be supportive of republican governments (i.e. representative governments where power arises from the people) and yet grovel before unelected monarchs. And, as long as US foreign policy leaders follow such a submissive course, America will remain obedient to kings, emirs, shahs, shoguns, czars, sultans, etc.
An Open Letter to Dr. Colin S. Cavell
This will be a short letter and response to your barbed words used often against the government of the United States, the administration of President George W. Bush, American conservatives, and least of all me in your latest blog at http://bahraincenter.blogspot.com/2011/05/bahrain-updates-14-monarchy-and.html.
Why are you parading as a democratic and human rights advocate? While I served as a U.S. Fulbright Scholar in Bahrain I heard you repeatedly advocate for the violent overthrow of the United States, the government of Bahrain, and other “capitalist countries.” No doubt you were caught for such activities in Bahrain and thus ran from your job in that country only to hide in the very nation that you ridiculed daily.
Why do you not have the courage to honestly and publicly admit you are Communist, which you have admitted on occasion when no one in authority was listening? Why do you not admit that you support the violent overthrow of all democratic, popularly elected governments in order to enslave them under a totalitarian regime? And now you claim you support democracy?
Do you not remember the public debates we had in class where you admitted such? Do you not remember that you tried to justify the mass murder (communist purges) of multiplied millions of people in China, Russia, Cambodia, and Vietnam, stating, “it was worth it”?
Wish you would have had the courage to continue to debate me in Bahrain, but you chose not to, fearing that you would be exposed and the student body would see your agenda.
Let me state for the record that I am deeply saddened that the many decent Shia of Bahrain are manipulated by people like you.
Why do you not have the courage to honestly and publicly admit you are Communist, which you have admitted on occasion when no one in authority was listening? Why do you not admit that you support the violent overthrow of all democratic, popularly elected governments in order to enslave them under a totalitarian regime? And now you claim you support democracy?
Fourth, this is a war for civility. Our American sentiments that glamorize “the people” are useless in Afghanistan. Corruption, deceit, duplicity, and treachery are rife in Afghanistan and that at the local level. Everything in the average American does not want to believe that. Our political and cultural values taught to us from childhood have conditioned us to lionize the average human, believe we are equal culturally (in moral and social development), and thus we are victimized by our own ideology. Cultural relativism wreaks a foul odor in the valleys of truth, and how much more in the valleys found here in Afghanistan, where acts of charity are often viewed as a sign of weakness, and billions of dollars of aid have created as many enemies as friends, or at least, created instability and not the reverse (http://www.thoughts.com/martinscottcatino/afghanistan-and-the-valley-between-us).
Civility indeed!
About the author:
Until February 15th of this year, I was an Assistant Professor teaching in the American Studies Center at the University of Bahrain. I submitted my resignation following the Fall semester at the end of January, as my wife, a Moroccan national, was granted an immigrant visa to the US by the State Department with the proviso that we be residing within the USA by April 1, 2011. Little did we know in January, when I submitted my resignation, that we would be in a race for time before we could leave, as the Arab rebellions were sweeping from Tunisia to Egypt to Yemen and into Bahrain and beyond. We left Bahrain on February 25th, the day of the largest demonstrations in Bahraini history, and have since been residing in Seattle, Washington.
Background on Bahrain:
On February 14, 2011, the citizenry of Bahrain rose up in opposition to the Al Khalifa monarchy and demanded democratic reforms. Their voices were met with stiff resistance from the autocratic regime which has been in power for over 200 years now. Unbowed, the citizenry took to the Pearl Roundabout in downtown Manama with some advocating for a constitutional monarchy and others a democratic republic. In response, the regime unleashed a reign of terror down on the protesters. Meanwhile, the US was directing its focus on Libya and getting through the United Nations a resolution for a no-fly zone over that country, which passed on Thursday, March 17th. One week prior, on Friday, March 11th, US Defense Secretary Robert Gates flew to Bahrain and met with the King and the Crown Prince, and on Monday, March 14th, approximately 2000 to 3000 Saudi Arabian and Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) tanks and troops rolled across the causeway from Saudi Arabia into Bahrain to crush the opposition. The next day, March 15th, King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa issued Royal Decree No. 18 for the year 2011, declaring a three-month "State of National Safety". The Bahrain Defence Forces (BDF) subsequently began a systematic crackdown on anyone who was suspected of opposing the monarchy and calling for democracy. On March 18th, the BDF tore down the Pearl Monument, known to locals as either "Lulu" or "the GCC Monument" and to the international press as "Pearl Square" due to its similarity to Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt where protesters had gathered. The regime's crackdown is an attempt to wipe away the memory of the 2011 Bahraini Democratic Spring from the popular mindset, and they are sparing nothing to root out and crush, using force, intimidation, torture, and murder, any further resistance. The silence from most of the mainstream media in America is deafening.
The fact that the US Fifth Fleet is based in Bahrain and the fact that the US is completely dependent on and addicted to Saudi-monarchy oil–i.e. oil doled out by a corrupt and sclerotic regime, and that both regimes (i.e. the Al Sauds and the Al Khalifas)–indeed all GCC regimes–in turn, are kept in power by US guns, makes all the difference–for now at least. The US is clearly supporting the Al-Khalifa monarchy, putting its oil interests ahead of its avowed democratic principles. From all accounts, the beating into submission as well as the subsequent bloodbath continues in earnest. For US citizens, it is another lost opportunity… But with your help and voices, we can eventually rectify our country's policy in this regard and realign it with our country's avowed democratic principles.
US interests in the long term will ultimately be served by supporting democratic elements and, eventually, democratic regimes in the Middle East North Africa (MENA) region. Does that mean we should overthrow existing governments? No, but it does mean that we should not be arming, financially supporting, and enabling corrupt regimes to slaughter opposition forces advocating for democratic rights in their countries, and then remaining silent while it happens. Sycophancy in the service of autocratic rulers with decidedly undemocratic ethos is degrading and demeaning. Such a stance is an affront to humanity. Putting off the goal of aligning ourselves with democratic elements for short-term advantage will have negative repercussions not only on current US foreign policy but, as well, on US domestic policy, as millions of petro-dollars will find their way back into US politics attempting to undermine our democracy here at home. While countering theocratic influence in the region is understandable and necessary, this will require a strategy with quite a bit more sophistication than is presently being demonstrated. As well, implementing such a strategy will necessitate experienced hands who are neither intimidated by the apparent chaos often associated with democratic movements nor infatuated with monarchical tendencies and supportive of elite rule as some bureaucrats appear to be.
NOTE:
Names and other identifying information have been removed and/or redacted in order to protect the safety of the sender[s], unless the person(s) is (are) a reporter or a public activist(s) and want their names to be known, as publicity sometimes gives them some protection from regime retaliation. If you are not a known public activist and/or reporter, please inform me if you would like your name to appear along with your report; otherwise, I will redact it to maintain your anonymity.
regards,
csc
thepearlroundabout.org |
- Bahrain denies abusing female Shiite doctors
- France 24 correspondent tortured for covering pro-democracy demonstrations
- End actions against the medics in Bahrain
- Arab spring: an interactive timeline of Middle East protests
- UK trained Bahraini army officers even after crackdown began
- Who cares in the Middle East what Obama says?
- Gulf Air lays off hundreds, sales drop on unrest
- Bahrain: ‘We will keep insisting on our just demands’
- Ecclestone still hopeful of Bahrain solution
- Bahrain Shi’ite leader says backs royal family
Bahrain denies abusing female Shiite doctors Posted: 30 May 2011 01:50 PM PDT AFP – Bahrain's interior ministry on Monday denied claims made to AFP by female Shiite doctors that they were abused and tortured while in detention over their alleged backing for anti-regime protests. |
France 24 correspondent tortured for covering pro-democracy demonstrations Posted: 30 May 2011 01:40 PM PDT Reporters Without Borders – When Nazeeha Saeed, the Bahrain correspondent of France 24 and Radio Monte Carlo Doualiya, was summoned to a police station in the city of Rifa’a for questioning at midday on 22 May, she expected to be back home two hours later and had no inkling of the nightmare awaiting her. |
End actions against the medics in Bahrain Posted: 30 May 2011 09:37 AM PDT Irish Medical Times – Recent events in the Kingdom of Bahrain have evidenced violations of the Geneva Conventions, with the arrest of doctors and nursing staff treating persons injured during civil unrest in that country. |
Arab spring: an interactive timeline of Middle East protests Posted: 30 May 2011 09:21 AM PDT The Guardian – Ever since a man in Tunisia burned himself to death in December 2010 in protest at his treatment by police, pro-democracy rebellions have erupted across the Middle East. The Guardian's interactive timeline traces key events |
UK trained Bahraini army officers even after crackdown began Posted: 30 May 2011 09:17 AM PDT The Independent – Britain continued to train Bahraini army officers at Sandhurst months after the Gulf state began its brutal crackdown against pro-democracy demonstrators, it was disclosed yesterday. |
Who cares in the Middle East what Obama says? Posted: 30 May 2011 09:16 AM PDT The Independent – President Obama has shown himself to be weak in his dealings with the Middle East, says Robert Fisk, and the Arab world is turning its back with contempt. Its future will be shaped without American influence |
Gulf Air lays off hundreds, sales drop on unrest Posted: 30 May 2011 09:13 AM PDT Reuters – Gulf Air, Bahrain's loss-making national carrier, said it had laid off 200 employees and bookings were down a quarter following political and social unrest in Bahrain and the region. |
Bahrain: ‘We will keep insisting on our just demands’ Posted: 30 May 2011 09:12 AM PDT Green Left – Protests across Bahrain that began on February 14 have rocked the US-backed Khalifa royal family, mobilising hundreds of thousands of people against the regime's repressive rule. |
Ecclestone still hopeful of Bahrain solution Posted: 30 May 2011 09:06 AM PDT CNN – Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone is hopeful that the postponed Bahrain Grand Prix will take place this season despite the recent turmoil in the Gulf Kingdom. |
Bahrain Shi’ite leader says backs royal family Posted: 30 May 2011 07:31 AM PDT Reuters – The leader of Bahrain's main Shi'ite opposition party said on Sunday his goal was to help bring political reform, rejecting accusations of taking orders from Iran or seeking to install Shi'ite religious rule. |
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Dear Friends,
Hope this email finds you well. Updates on Bahrain:
1. June 1st will be the beginning of a new wave of protests as announced by what is known as the “February 14th Coalition”. (Read more below)
2. June 1st will be the next hearing of the 21 prominent leaders and may be when the sentencing will take place.
3. June 1st is when King has announced will be the lifting of State of National Safety. (Military courts are to continue and GCC forces will not be leaving.)
4. Defense lawyers Mohammed Ahmed, Hafedh Hafedh and Mohammed AlJishi were interrogated today by the military prosecution and later released with the guarantee of location. Charges against them are: illegal assembly (more than 5 people illegal in Bahrain without authorization from Ministry of Interior), demonstrating outside justice ministry and inciting hatred of regime.
5. There are still many cases in which people were arrested more than two months ago and their families have yet to hear anything from them. Many are concerned that they are being tortured. For example: Ali Abdulla Albanna was arrested two months ago, still no communication and location unknown. Mohammed AlBuflasah was the first to be arrested on February 15th, still not released.
6. Resigned MP Matar Matar, after a month since his arrest, calls his family and says he is ok
7. Still cases of missing injured like: Student Mohammed AbdulMahdi Kadhem was injured during attack on university of Bahrain, moved to hospital, now there is no info about him.
8. People are still being fired from their jobs in what people now call the “Regime’s campaign of hunger”. (Read more below)
9. State of daily terror: plea for help from a citizen of Bahrain (Read below.)
10. February 14th Coalition has put together a report of what they have documented in cases since beginning of protests. For those of you interested in reading it: online http://bit.ly/j6b3cf. Download: http://bit.ly/mfLEa9
11. Numerous attacks on Shia businesses by what appear to be government thugs:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4flgj8SUF5U
Kindly find attached the new report on Children in Arabic and English.
AFP: Bahraini female doctors recount detention 'horror'http://tinyurl.com/42vdde9
Official document certified that the dismissal of employees is because of opinions: http://byshr.org/?p=532
President of Bahrain Centre for Human Rights still banned from traveling as he attempted to leave the country yesterday to attend an international conference that was organized by IFEX and attended by more than 100 local, regional and international human rights organizations.
Human Rights Defenders Nabeel Rajab, Abbas AlOmran and Maryam Alkhawaja along with other activists labeled as terrorists (see picture attached). Activists are being targeted through harassment, death threats and defamation campaigns online.
Best,
(Sent by February 14 Coalition)
URGENT APEAL FROM BAHRAIN!
To all institutions of the international community and permanent members of the Security Council and international organizations, human rights bodies and mrdia outlets around the world, we call on you all to dispatch international observers to monitor the peaceful rallies planned to take place in Bahrain, starting from the first of June 2011, in order record the expected abuses and aggressions by the Regime and the Saudi occupation forces against the peaceful demonstrators. The law on National Safety (Martial law) is scheduled to be lifted on this date; it is the law under which the authorities cracked down every peaceful protest, confined peaceful demonstrators in prisons, subjected them to non imaginable forms of torture, amounting to physical liquidation, and pronounced the most unfair sentences, including death sentences, by illegitimate military courts. We therefore submit this urgent appeal to the international community to intervene immediately in order to protect the Bahraini people's right to peaceful demonstration and to urge the Regime to abide by the principles of human rights and not to confiscate the right of citizens to demonstrate peacefully; which is established in all international laws and norms.
(ãäÇÔÏÉ ÚÇÌáÉ)
Hunger campaign and appeal from Bahrain:
"I feel the situation on the streets is worse than in prison sometimes, there is no safety. Nobody is safe. You never know when they’ll (the security forces) come into your home, when they’ll harass your mother, sister or daughter. You never know when your brother, father or uncle will go missing or get beaten and insulted. They are thieves when they go into homes they steal things. When they stop you at checkpoints they take your money. We are living in a state of daily terror and nobody is talking about this. There is nothing worse than living in constant fear. Nobody is safe from them (the security forces). Everyone else has to stand in the face of their own government but we have to stand in the face of 5 monarchies, 4 monarchies which sent troops to help violate our freedom. They've fired more than 1300 people from their jobs soon people will run out of money to even feed their families or pay off their loans and now they are recruiting people from other countries to take the jobs of those who have been fired. Why is no one responding to the humanitarian crisis in Bahrain? What are they waiting for?”
(According to BCHR statistics, the layoffs affect approximately 9000 people in Bahrain due to many of those being fired being the bread winners in their families.)
Date: Mon, May 30, 2011 at 6:20 AM
Subject: Part 2
Date: Sun, May 29, 2011 at 12:55 PM
Subject: Part 1
From: Richard Wolff <rdwolff@att.net>
Date: Tue, May 24, 2011 at 1:39 PM
Subject: Fw: Hundreds of Bahrainis join call to end US support for Bahrain gov't
To: "Ph.D. Colin S. Cavell" <ccavell@gmail.com>
From: Joanne Landy-Campaign for Peace & Democracy <cpd@igc.org>
To: rdwolff@att.net
Sent: Tue, May 24, 2011 4:25:53 PM
Subject: Hundreds of Bahrainis join call to end US support for Bahrain gov't
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 24, 2011
Contact: Joanne Landy cpd@igc.org
U.S. CAMPAIGN AGAINST U.S. SUPPORT
FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF BAHRAIN
NEW YORK, N.Y., May 24 2011 – In a response that surprised U.S. organizers of a campaign calling on the United States government to repudiate its partnership with the Al Khalifa regime in Bahrain, hundreds of people from Bahrain joined in signing the Campaign for Peace and Democracy’s launching statement "End U.S. Support for Bahrain's Repressive Government.”
"The statement was originally circulated for signatures in the United States, but we have been deeply moved by the fact that hundreds of Bahrainis have added their names," said Joanne Landy, CPD Co-Director. "Given the violent government crackdown in Bahrain, the very act of signing is incredibly courageous. Bahraini signers have implored us to pressure the Obama administration to decisively repudiate its support of their brutal and authoritarian government."
On May 16, the New York-based Campaign for Peace and Democracy (CPD) began circulating its statement, which has thus far gathered more than 1200 signatures including those of Ed Asner, Medea Benjamin, Noam Chomsky, Martin Duberman, Daniel Ellsberg, Mike Farrell, Chris Hedges, Adam Hochschild, Jan Kavan, Kathy Kelly, Dave Marsh, Frances Fox Piven, Katha Pollitt, Alix Kates Shulman and Cornel West. The statement is below and on the CPD website. Signatures are still being accepted. The statement will be sent to President Obama, Secretary of State Clinton, and key members of Congress, as well as to domestic and international media.
THE TEXT OF THE CPD STATEMENT FOLLOWS:
End U.S. Support for Bahrain's Repressive Government
Statement by the Campaign for Peace and Democracy
May 16, 2011
(Add your name, donate or share at http://www.cpdweb.org/stmts/1019/stmt.shtml )
On Feb. 13, 2011, inspired by the forced resignation of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, peaceful democratic protests erupted in Bahrain. Protests grew and, in response, King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa invited other Gulf states to send security forces into the country to assist in violently suppressing the demonstrators. The March 15 invasion by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates brought an intensification of torture, secret trials, demolition of Shia mosques, and repression against human rights activists, journalists, labor, lawyers, medical professionals, students, political figures, and others. On March 18 the regime destroyed the Pearl Monument that had served as the protest center.
Hundreds of workers, including union leaders, have been fired for striking for democratic change. Security forces closed down the General Bahraini Federation of Trade Unions headquarters. The Bahrain Center for Human Rights writes, “Bahrain is currently considered a dangerous zone for the freedom of press and journalists.” On April 3 the government suspended the country’s only independent newspaper, Al Wasat. On May 2 it arrested two politicians belonging to the opposition Al Wefaq party.
Zainab Alkhawaja wrote to President Obama after her father, Abdulhadi Alkhawaja, former head of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, was beaten unconscious in front of his family and arrested by masked men: “if anything happens to my father, my husband, my uncle, my brother-in-law, or to me, I hold you just as responsible as the Al Khalifa regime. Your support for this monarchy makes your government a partner in crime. I still have hope that you will realize that freedom and human rights mean as much to a Bahraini person as it does to an American, Syrian or a Libyan and that regional and political considerations should not be prioritized over liberty and human rights.”
As the Arab Spring has swept through North Africa and the Middle East, the role of the United States has been truly shameful.Washington’s rhetoric cannot conceal a deep fear of democracy. Its first instinct was to stand behind its old friends. Only when it became obvious that Ben Ali’s and Mubarak’s days were numbered were they abandoned. As for Saudi Arabia, this ultra-reactionary monarchy, with its appalling treatment of women and religious minorities,is almost never criticized by U.S. officials.
There are those who, while deploring repression in Bahrain, justify continuing U.S. support for that country's brutal tyranny as "realism"; in a dangerous world, they argue, our security depends on having a Middle Eastern state willing to host the Fifth Fleet. This argument is profoundly mistaken. Interventionist naval forces are part of a foreign policy that, by siding with despots and pitting the United States against the Arab people's longing for responsible government and a better way of life, guarantees endless terrorism and bloodshed and an even more dangerous world for everyone. For good reason, democratic movements around the world today do not trust the United States, which they see as motivated by imperial interest. That is why the U.S. desperately needs a new foreign policy, one that welcomes democratic forces — not hypocritically, in order to manipulate them and blunt their impact, but to stand in solidarity with their struggles to win political power for the people and achieve social and economic justice.
* * * * * * *
Campaign for Peace and Democracy, Co-Directors Joanne Landy and Thomas Harrison, 2790 Broadway, #12, NY, NY 10025. Email: cpd@igc.org Web: www.cpdweb.org
June 1, 2011 No Comments
Urgent Appeal: Daughter of Abdulhadi Alkhawaja and internationally known hunger striker summoned to police station
Urgent Appeal – Protection of Zainab Alkhawaja, daughter of imprisoned Bahrain Huamn Rights Defender Abdulhadi Alkhawaja.
In alarming news and despite promises of reform by the King, Zainab Alkhawaja (known on twitter as @angryarabiya) has been summoned to the police station tomorrow at 6pm. Zainab Alkhawaja went on a 10 day hungerstrike in response to her father,
uncle, husband and brother in law getting arrested. read more here Her hunger strike received worldwide media attention. Her father and uncle are now undergoing a military, trial. read more here. Her husband and brother in law are still in detention with no access to lawyers or family, and it is unknown under what charges they are being kept or their location.
The summoning raises great concern as her father, Abdulhadi Alkhawaja, told his family a few days ago that security forces inside the prison kept threatening that they had arrested and raped his daughter Zainab. Therefore this is an urgent appeal for international pressure to prevent any physical or psychological harm to Zainab Al-khawaja.
June 1, 2011 No Comments
They have already started using birdshot and tear gas” against the demonstrators
Bahrain halts demos as emergency rule end
by W.G. Dunlop W.g. Dunlop – 55 mins ago
DUBAI (AFP) – Bahraini security forces were accused of using violence on Wednesday to halt an attempt by pro-reform protesters to stage new demonstrations, even as a state of emergency was lifted.
The crackdown came one day after King Hamad had called for a national dialogue, and followed appeals for the authorities in the Gulf state to allow people to demonstrate peacefully.
“People are trying to gather… and they are attacking them,” one activist told AFP by telephone, referring to protests in villages around the capital Manama including Diraz, Bani Jamrah and Karzakan.
“They have already started using birdshot (and) tear gas” against the demonstrators, she said, adding that an unknown number of people had suffered injuries.
Another activist reported a heavy security presence in Bani Jamrah and said security forces had fired tear gas at protesters who dared to venture into the centre of the village.
He added that about 30 women had gathered in front of his house, but security forces used batons and tear gas to disperse them.
A clip on video-sharing website YouTube titled “Riot police attacking peaceful protesters June 1st in Bani Jamrah” showed a small group of young men gathering, some with Bahraini flags, chanting “peacefully, peacefully.” …more
June 1, 2011 No Comments
Early Confirmed Reports Bahrain Protests
Urgent: attacks on protests right now. Several protests have started today in many parts of Bahrain, all of which have been violently attacked by security forces using teargas, sound bombs and bird shotgun pellets.Due to fear of going to hospitals protesters are treating themselves at home.
June 1, 2011 No Comments