Bahrain’s Democracy seeking Patriots treated as enemies of the State, dying in clouds of gas administered by brutal al Khalifa regime
Bahrain top Shiite cleric says authorities treat protesters as ‘enemies of state’
By Associated Press, Updated: Friday, September 16, 5:50 AM
MANAMA, Bahrain — Bahrain’s Sunni rulers have treated Shiite anti-government protesters seeking greater rights in the Gulf kingdom as “enemies of state,” a senior cleric said Friday, as tensions deepen between the strategic island’s minority Sunnis and majority Shiites.
The comments by Sheik Isa Qassim came as mourners were gathering for the funeral of a 35-year-old man who relatives say died after inhaling tear gas fired at protesters on Tuesday night. Sayyed Jawad Ahmed is to be buried later Friday in Bahrain’s oil hub of Sitra.
Anti-government protesters stand amid makeshift barricades in the headlights of riot police vehicles, unseen, during clashes in the Shiite Muslim area of Sitra, Bahrain, Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011. Clashes erupted after word of a Sitra man’s death. Relatives said the man died in hospital after being repeatedly exposed to heavy tear gas used by riot police to quell anti-government protests. The official Bahrain News Agency reported, however, that Sayed Jawad Ahmad, 35, was a sickle cell patient who died after suffering Acute Respiratory Syndrome Distress.
Clouds of tear gas waft through the streets of Sitra, Bahrain, on Wednesday night, Sept. 14, 2011. Clashes erupted after word of a Sitra man’s death. Relatives said the man died in hospital after being repeatedly exposed to heavy tear gas used by riot police to quell anti-government protests. The official Bahrain News Agency reported, however, that Sayed Jawad Ahmad, 35, was a sickle cell patient who died after suffering Acute Respiratory Syndrome Distress.
Clashes erupted after word of a Sitra man’s death. Relatives said the man died in hospital after being repeatedly exposed to heavy tear gas used by riot police to quell anti-government protests. The official Bahrain News Agency reported, however, that Sayed Jawad Ahmad, 35, was a sickle cell patient who died after suffering Acute Respiratory Syndrome Distress.
The kingdom’s health ministry confirmed the death in a statement Thursday, saying Ahmed died from “acute respiratory syndrome distress.”
Shiites make up a majority of Bahrain’s people, but they have long complained of discrimination at the hands of the country’s ruling Sunni dynasty and a lack of economic opportunities.
More than 30 people have died since February when protests started in Bahrain, inspired by other Arab uprisings.
Hundreds of activists have been detained and brought to trial on anti-state charges in a special security court set up after authorities imposed marital law and invited a Saudi-led Gulf military force in the country to help deal with dissent in the tiny island nation.
Bahrain is a strategically important nation in the Persian Gulf and is the home of the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet.
The United States has urged Bahrain’s ruling dynasty, a close Washington ally, to listen to the protesters’ demands for more political freedoms. However, a government-led national dialogue produced no compromise with the Shiite opposition, which only had token representation at the talks.
“The regime has designated the section of society asking for rights as enemies of state,” Sheik Isa said during Friday’s sermon at a mosque in the opposition stronghold of Diraz, northwest of the capital Manama.
Bahrain lifted emergency rule in June. Since then, government opponents have clashed with police almost every night. …source
September 16, 2011 No Comments
Gassing the Masses, It’s dangerous and It’s deadly
[cb editor: since the writing of this story several others have been killed by the use of CS Gas. The nonlethal is a lie.]
Lethal Non-Lethal Weapons: The Deadly Effects of Tear Gas in Bahrain
By marcowenjones On July 22, 2011
Tear gas, or CS gas, has become part of the daily diet of many Bahrainis who continue to take to the streets in pursuit of their democratic struggle. The use of this so-called ‘non-lethal’ crowd control weapon has become increasingly controversial, not least because it has potentially resulted in the death of 6 Bahrainis, including 6-year-old Mohammed Farhan. More recently, however, it is believed by many to have been responsible for the death of 47-year-old mother-of-two Zainab Juma, who died last Friday following demonstrations in Sitra. If we include the death of Ahmed Farhan, who was apparently killed when a stun grenade exploded right next to his head, then about one in six people have so far died in Bahrain as a result of these ‘non-lethal’ weapons. It makes sense then to explore the nature of these weapons, who sells them, who is affected by them, and how ‘ non-lethal’ they really are.
Who has died?
Of the approximately 40 people who have died so far, the following are thought to have died from tear gas inhalation; Zainab Hassan al-Juma (47) , Sayad Adnan Sayed Hassan (44), Zainab al-Tajer, Mohammed Farhan (6), Isa Mohammed Ali Abdulla (71) & Khadija Mirza Al-Abdulhai (50). Here we can see that those killed by tear gas are not just the very young or the very old. Indeed, tear gas seems to be responsible for the death of people of all ages and both sexes. I’ll stop short of saying it affects all demographics, since I think it is safe to say that most of the dead are neither the rich nor the privileged. So why is a supposedly ‘non-lethal’ technology so deadly. Well there are a number of reasons – including the misuse of tear gas, the fact that tear gas manufacturers have a poor quality control system, the variable concentrations used by different companies and also the fact that CS (2-chlorobenzalmalononitrile) is a potentially lethal chemical.
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September 16, 2011 No Comments