Peaceful, Peaceful, the longsuffering of Bahrain’s Revolution
Bahraini protesters hold an anti-regime demonstration in a village near the capital Manama, February 24, 2012.
February 27, 2012 No Comments
The Grand Prix by King Hamad, Killing them Harshly with His Thugs
And now a look at his sponsors
February 27, 2012 No Comments
How hard would you be willing to fight for your hopes and dreams of Freedom?
February 27, 2012 No Comments
Bahrain’s foreign minister has asked the British Government to Shut-up Critics
Bahrain remains a torture-permitting nation
Bahrain’s foreign minister has asked the British Government to get Denis MacShane to shut up about its human rights record. Here he explains why he will not be silent
by Denis MacShane – 25 February, 2012 – Tribune Magazine
I am used to endless lies and criticism from the British National Party and its favourite blogger, as well as the Islamist ideologues who hate my work on anti-Semitism, and the offshore-owned press obsessed about Europe. But this is the first time that a government, Bahrain, has written to the British Government asking the Foreign Secretary to shut me up.
In a 17-page open letter to William Hague, Bahrain foreign minister Shaikh Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa accuses me of making several “demonstrably misconceived” statements about the political situation in Bahrain without visiting the country. It is true that I have not been to Bahrain recently, but I don’t need to go to Syria or Iran or North Korea to know there are serious human rights issues in those countries.
The latest news from Bahrain remains ever more worrying. There are regular pro-democracy demonstrations which are severely repressed by the police. In a new tactic, the police are raiding individual homes and throwing tear gas canisters inside. Amnesty International reports that as many as 30 people may have been killed as they choked to death in confined spaces.
Last month, 24-year-old Yousif al-Mawaly was arrested, tortured and then dumped in the sea. Photographs of his body seen by the BBC appear to show abrasions and bruises consistent with beating.
Human Rights Watch has reported that Bahraini riot police beat a prominent human rights activist, Nabeel Rajab, head of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, as he was leaving a peaceful protest last month. Rajab said that the police attacked him using their fists and batons at about 8.30pm, as he was walking toward his car. “I noticed a number of riot police behind me. They were all in uniform. They started beating me and I fell on the ground. I told them that I was Nabeel Rajab, hoping that they would stop, but they kept beating and kicking me.”
The interior ministry stated on its Twitter account that riot police had found Rajab “lying on the ground” and transported him to the Salmaniya Medical Complex for treatment.
The Bahraini government has refused to allow independent human rights observers from entering the kingdom, on the first anniversary of the Bahrain uprising a year ago. Members of the ruling Khalifeh family are trying to kid the international community that they are willing to move on human rights.
They attach great store to the Bassiouni Commission which reported last November on the widespread killing and torture after the democracy uprising that began a year ago. The 500-page report itself is valuable, but few if any of its recommendations have been implemented. Some low-ranking police officers have been suspended, including five Pakistani and two Yemeni police officers. But the men at the top of the royal family who authorised the brutal crackdown, and the senior officers who oversaw torture and killings, are still in place.
The Bahraini government is now hiring human rights lawyers or former police officers including Commander John Yates, who had to leave Scotland Yard in disgrace, to come to Bahrain to assure the world that all is well. But women doctors and nurses are still on trial after they were arrested in their hospitals treating the wounded last year.
Dr Fatima Haji, for example, was charged with acts of terrorism, stealing blood from hospital and harming the public by spreading false news. She was sentenced to five years in prison on these trumped up charges worthy of Stalin’s show trials.
[Read more →]
February 27, 2012 No Comments
How many more must die before Bahrain is Free
February 27, 2012 No Comments
US Drones now routinely violate Sovereign Airspace of other nations with impunity
US Drones in Syrian Sky
Local Editor – moqowama.com
US Military officials informed US NBC News channel that “a good number of unmanned US military drones are operating in the skies over Syria to monitor the so-called President Bashar al-Assad’s military’s crackdown against the opposition.”
In comments published on Saturday, the officials claimed that “this surveillance is not in preparation for US military intervention.”
Admitting the continuous existence of US military drones in the Syrian sky, the US officials claimed that “the Obama administration hopes to use the overhead visual evidence and intercepts of Syrian government and military communications in an effort to make the case for a widespread international response.” According to NBC News, “there has been some discussion among White House, State Department and Pentagon officials about possible humanitarian missions to Syria.”
“US officials fear that those missions could not be carried out without endangering those involved and would almost certainly draw the United States into a military role in Syria,” the channel claimed. …source
February 27, 2012 No Comments
Syria: The War Drum of Regional War
Syria: The Wrong Drum to Beat
By Peter Certo – 24 February, 2012 – FPIF
Cross-posted from IPS Special Project Right Web’s Militarist Monitor.
The recent deaths of two Western journalists in Syria, killed during the Assad regime’s shelling of the Amr Baba neighborhood in Homs, has cast a new light on a near-daily slog of reports chronicling the carnage in Syria, where the regime has launched increasingly brutal attacks on civilian population centers in response to an increasingly armed and violent opposition.
Citing the final dispatch of Marie Colvin, one of the slain reporters, the Washington Post quickly editorialized: “Ms. Colvin was trying to tell the world is that [Srebrenica] is happening again, in Baba Amr. … If the Western nations and Syria’s neighbors continue to stand by passively, Ms. Colvin’s words will come back to haunt them.” A few days before, the Post had explicitly called for the West to arm Syria’s opposition elements: “The most available and workable solution,” it claimed, “is tactical and materiel support for the anti-regime forces, delivered through neighbors such as Turkey or the Persian Gulf states.”
That the Post, with its cast of neoconservative writers and editors, would call for U.S. involvement in a conflict in the Middle East should come as no surprise. Neither should calls by Sens. John McCain (R-AZ) and Lindsey Graham (R-SC) for the United States to channel arms to Syrian opposition fighters through connections in “third-world countries,” or Sen. Joe Lieberman’s (I-CT) support for instituting Libya-style “no-fly” zones over parts of Syria. But the Obama administration, which has ostensibly sought a diplomatic resolution to the crisis, also appears to be softening its once-strong opposition to arming Syria’s rebels.
Last week, a coalition of 56 hawks assembled by the neoconservative Foundation for Defense of Democracies and Foreign Policy Initiative sent President Obama an open letter demanding action on Syria. The letter—whose signatories included the likes of Paul Bremer, Elizabeth Cheney, and Dan Senor—called on the president “to take immediate steps to decisively halt the Assad regime’s atrocities against Syrian civilians, and to hasten the emergence of a post-Assad government in Syria,” including by providing “self-defense aid to the FSA [Free Syrian Army].”
Calls for further escalation will doubtless follow. And although they are keen to raise recent events, many of the letter’s signatories have been calling for regime change in Syria for months or even years.
Max Boot, another signatory to the letter, has claimed that “foreign jihadists will flock to Syria” if Assad is not deposed—a rather astonishing assertion given the documented (if not overwhelming) presence of Islamists in Syria’s domestic opposition, as well as Iraq’s all too recent descent into violent extremism in the wake the U.S. invasion.
However, Syria hawks have yet to articulate how funneling arms to a fractured Syrian opposition could help end the bloodletting in the country. Foreign Policy’s Marc Lynch, himself a stringent backer of the NATO action in Libya, has strongly opposed a similar course in Syria. “Arming the Syrian opposition is not a cheap and effective substitute for military intervention,” he wrote, “and it is not a generally harmless way to ‘do something.’ It does not guarantee either the protection of the Syrian people or the end of the Assad regime. It is more likely to produce a protracted stalemate, increased violence, more regional and international meddling, and eventual calls for direct military intervention.” …more
February 27, 2012 No Comments
Bahrain Youth Society for Human Rights Exposes Abuses
Contest: Expose Human Rights Violations in Bahrain to Prevent Impunity
27 February, 2012 – Physicians Human Rights
Bahrain Youth Society for Human Rights (BYSHR) will organize a competition in order to expose human rights violations using the video camera.
Three video cameras as prizes: You must shoot – Video – human rights violation is happening in your area or village and you send it to vid.prize@gmail.com
“We want to expose human rights violations using the video camera in order to punish offenders and provide protection to the victims” Mohammed AL-Maskati, president of the BYSHR, said.
“Human rights violations should not be hidden or in the dark,” AL-Maskati said.
“This contest in honor Mr.Abdulhadi Al-Khawaja, who trained many of the activists on the documentation and monitoring to protect human rights” Yousif Abdulrasool, Coordinator of the contest, said.
“The BYSHR demanding the Bahraini authorities to immediately release of Mr.Al-Khawaja and Mr.Naji Fateel board member of the BYSHR,” Abdulrasool said. …source
February 27, 2012 No Comments
Sitra Nonviolent Protest Continue without Rest
February 27, 2012 No Comments
Bahraini Ambassador to US Highlights Bahrain’s Religious Freedom
Destroyed Shia Mosque outside of Misrata in June, 2011 – Example of Religious Freedom Goals of Regime
Bahraini Ambassador to US Highlights Bahrain’s Religious Freedom
26 February, 2012 – BNA
Washington, Feb. 26. (BNA) — Bahrain’s Ambassador to the United States Houda Nonoo has highlighted the Kingdom’s superlative record in preserving religious freedom in a speech to members of the Chevy Chase Presbyterian Church on Thursday evening.
“Bahrain is a free and open society. Women are fully empowered members of society. Although Bahrain is a Muslim country, religious minorities – including Christians, Jews, Hindus and Baha’i – enjoy full freedom of worship,” Ambassador Nonoo said. “Today, next to mosques, Bahrain is home to 19 registered Churches, a synagogue, Hindu temples and many other places of worship.”
Welcoming members of the Congregation led by Rev. Fuad Khouri to Bahrain’s Embassy, the Ambassador also reflected on the past year’s events and reiterated the Kingdom’s commitment to ongoing reform. “Bahrain’s government is committed to reform, and to implementing progressive policies that will help achieve reconciliation for all Bahrainis,” she said. “We are committed to that journey because the future of Bahrain and its people relies on a meaningful unification strategy. This journey has begun.”
Reflecting on the evening in a post on her blog, Ambassador Nonoo stated: “Events like these are a wonderful opportunity to share Bahrain’s unique story as a progressive outpost in the Middle East and I look forward to sharing Bahrain’s longstanding tradition of religious freedom with our American friends.”
Another stunning example of Shia Mosque Crushed by Regime bolstering Religious Freedoms
February 27, 2012 No Comments
US and Russian Weapons Sales and Opportunism fueling Middle East Catastrophe
Saudi Arabia and Syria — Iran Is in the Background
27 February, 2012 – Huffington Post – Dr. Josef Olmert
Sheikh Awad Al-Qarni is a prominent and well-respected Saudi cleric. Alongside his well-documented Islamic scholarship he is a fan of offering prize money towards causes dear to him. In the past, he offered $100,000 to the kidnapper and murderer of an Israeli soldier. These days, the benevolent Sheikh offers the same amount of money to the good Muslim who will assassinate Bashar Assad of Syria. Doing that, so the cleric declared, is an obligation more important even than killing an Israeli soldier.
Surely, a collective sigh of relief is heard in Israel, and the opposite in Syria, as the security apparatus around the besieged Syrian dictator must have paid attention to the forms of death that the Sheikh wishes their boss in Damascus. Hanging is the most benign of them…
It is not clear, whether the Sheikh coordinated his new plan with the rulers of his country, but he may still have been inspired by what seems to be a hardening Saudi attitude towards Bashar Assad. The Saudi foreign minister, Saud Al-Faysal, a veteran of many diplomatic conferences about the Middle East, left in disgust, the much-celebrated and little-achieving conference of the “Friends of Syria” in Tunis, initiated by the U.S., and attended by 70 states. The Saudi minister lamented the fact that the conferees referred to the “humanitarian aspect” of the Syrian tragedy, instead of discussing practical ways to help the rebels, including foreign military intervention. Clearly, the Saudis, always so cautious in dealing with Arab regional issues, have a reason why they want decisive action now in order to bring the Assad regime down.
They did not always show their profound resentment towards the Alawite dictatorship in Damascus. In fact, the Wahabbis of Riyad and Mecca flirted with both Hafiz and Bashar Assad when it suited their regional goals. This was not part of any newly-discovered empathy towards the Alawite religion, that much we should never expect from the pious Saudis. This was all about realpolitik, as the Alawites seemed to be entrenched in power in a country that has a major role to play in Middle East politics. So, King Abdallah swallowed his pride and sense of obvious disgust towards the Alawite regime, and paid Bashar Assad a visit, lasting just hours, in July of 2009. Less than a year later, the Saudi monarch, not known to be a frequent flyer, due to his age and illnesses, came to Beirut to confer with the host Lebanese President and Bashar Assad, in the aftermath of the UN report about the assassination of former Lebanese P.M. Rafiq Hariri. This tripartite summit was a diplomatic coup to the Syrian dictator, who was on top of the world, enjoying the Saudi recognition of Syria’s special role in Lebanese affairs, happening just five years after the not so dignified Syrian withdrawal from Lebanon during the “Cedar Revolution.” …more
February 27, 2012 No Comments
King Hamad your brutality only ensures generations of resistance to tyranny
February 27, 2012 No Comments
Protesters Remain Vigilant and Unshaken throughout Bahrain’s Villages
February 27, 2012 No Comments
If Police did this in US kids in streets with Molotovs would be a mild response
February 27, 2012 No Comments
Secretary Clinton delcares herself as leader for “Free Syria” Movement
Clinton: Syria Constitution vote a ‘ploy’
27 February, 2012 – UPI
DAMASCUS, Syria, Feb. 27 (UPI) — Results from a Syrian vote on a new constitution, roundly criticized in the West, will be available Monday, the Assad regime said as dozens died in fighting.
The results will be announced Monday evening, the official Syrian Arab News Agency said.
Interior Minister Mohammed Shaar was quoted by the state-run agency as saying the voting at more than 14,000 polling stations for multiparty elections and presidential term limits began at 7 a.m. local time and ran “normally” in most provinces, with turnout “huge … except in some areas.”
But The New York Times reported no voters appeared in the southern Damascus district of Ma’adamiah until about 1 p.m., and most of them were municipal workers.
Other polling places appeared deserted, the newspaper said.
Videos posted online by opposition groups purported to show people demonstrating against the vote throughout the country. One showed a poster saying, “We step on the new constitution.”
President Bashar Assad and his British-born wife Asma smiled and waved to cheering public employees as they voted at a polling station in the state-run broadcast center in Damascus, the capital, government TV images showed.
A 36-year-old woman who said she was from the same Alawite clan as Assad told the Times her vote meant a “new Syria.”
“This new constitution will shift Syria into the ranks of the democratic countries,” she said.
The new constitution, made public a couple of weeks ago despite Assad’s promises of constitutional reforms since at least June 2011, ends the ruling Baath Party’s political monopoly and introduces presidential term limits.
But the term limits — two terms of seven years each — would start only after Assad’s current term expires in 2014, the draft constitution says.
…more
February 27, 2012 No Comments
Speaker Ali Larijani sees Iran as Leader and Inspiration of “Islamic Awakening”
They are in conflict with us as they consider Iran as the real source of the anti-hegemonic movements and the Islamic Awakening [in the region], and they cannot tolerate the sovereignty of our nation, Egypt and other Islamic countries.”, Ali Larijani
West fumes at Iran for inspiring MENA revolutions: Larijani
27 February, 2012 – PressTV
Iran’s Majlis Speaker Ali Larijani says the hegemonic powers are enraged at Iran over the Islamic Republic’s inspirational role in the regional pro-democracy movements.
They are in conflict with us as they consider Iran as the real source of the anti-hegemonic movements and the Islamic Awakening [in the region], and they cannot tolerate the sovereignty of our nation, Egypt and other Islamic countries, Larijani said in the city of Qom on Sunday night.
He said one of the main reasons behind the hegemonic powers’ opposition to regional revolutions was their reluctance to accept the regional countries’ willpower for self-rule.
Iran’s Majlis speaker further said that the enemies’ major problem with Iran is not the nuclear issue; rather, the hegemonic powers do not want the Iranian nation to have independence.
Commenting on the upcoming parliamentary elections in Iran, Larijani called for a high turnout of the people in the elections and said, given the current circumstances, the Iranian nation’s mass participation in Friday’s votes is of high national, regional and global significance.
He also pointed out that a high turnout at the polling stations would discourage the enemies from threatening or restricting Iran in the international arena.
“Today, the eyes of many ill-wishers are on the elections in Iran. They seek to shatter the grandeur of the Iranian nation, but the nation’s epic turnout will definitely fail them,” Iran’s top parliamentarian said.
Over 48 million Iranian voters are eligible to cast their ballots in the 9th parliamentary elections on March 2. In the elections, more than 3,400 candidates are competing for the 290 seats in Majlis. …source
February 27, 2012 No Comments
Why is Obama Arming Wahabist, Dictators and Recruiting and Reactivating Al Qaeda Cells
Why Is Obama Selling Arms to a Theocratic Dictatorship?
David Keyes – 6 January, 2012 – The New Republic
On December 29, the White House announced that it was sending nearly $30 billion worth of F-15 fighter jets to Saudi Arabia, part of a $60 billion package—the largest arms deal in history. President Obama has come a long way since his 2008 declaration that “nothing is more important than us no longer borrowing $700 billion or more from China and sending it to Saudi Arabia.” Apparently it was the borrowing part that really irked him—not the arming of a gender-apartheid, theocratic dictatorship.
The justification for the arms sale is simple. The deal will provide at least 50,000 jobs to Americans—good PR at a time of great economic distress. More importantly, it is intended to counter the very real threat of Iran, a regional menace that has brutally repressed its own people and sponsored terrorism worldwide. But arming one theocratic dictator to stop another is not only bad policy, it is profoundly immoral.
To see why, just consider the reaction of one Saudi dissident to the news. “America has never supported human rights in Saudi Arabia,” a leading female democracy activist told me on condition of anonymity. “America wants stability no matter what the price. But Saudi Arabia has become a police-state. My friends and I are being arrested, especially writers, activists, and reformers. It’s becoming North Korea with less military power. Someone may be reading what I’m writing to you now.”
Indeed, after signing a recent reformist petition, prominent liberal Mohammed Saeed Taib was banned from traveling, even to his daughter’s upcoming wedding. Shortly thereafter, Saudi poet Ali Al Domaini was called in for questioning. One by one, reformers are being intimidated, arrested, and silenced—and these are the lucky ones. Amina bint Abdulhalim Nassar and Abdul Hamid Al Fakki were beheaded in recent months for “witchcraft.”
Yet the United States is sending the $60 million dollars without demanding any human rights reforms in return. The late Senator Henry “Scoop” Jackson once said, “We Americans are fortunate to have at our service the greatest economy the world has ever known. It can do more than enrich our lives. It can be pressed into service as an instrument of our commitment to individual liberty.” Both Democratic and Republican administrations have missed crucial opportunities to condition U.S. aid and arms on the rights of Saudi women to drive, Christians to pray, and gays to live. The White House could have demanded an end to the industry of Saudi textbooks calling Jews and Christians “apes and pigs.” Instead, it compromised its most cherished ideals and sacrificed liberty in the name of stability. As a result, it will get neither. …more
February 27, 2012 No Comments
Secretary Clinton sees US as Vanguard and Protector of “Arab Awakening”
“They [Russia, China] are setting themselves not only against the Syrian people but also the entire Arab awakening,” Secretary Clinton
China calls U.S. criticism over Syria “totally unacceptable”
27 February, 2012 – By Chris Buckley – Reuters The Star
BEIJING: China on Monday called “totally unacceptable” U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s denunciation of its stand on Syria, and a top newspaper said that, after the Iraq war, Washington was “super arrogant” to claim to speak for Arab people.
China’s angry words came after Clinton on Friday called the Chinese and Russian veto of a U.N. resolution on Syria “despicable”.
“They are setting themselves not only against the Syrian people but also the entire Arab awakening,” Clinton said of China and Russia, which have resisted Western and Arab calls to push Syrian President Bashar Assad from power.
China’s defence of its policy was also vehement.
“This is totally unacceptable for us,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei told a daily briefing.
“China has always determined its stance on the Syrian issue proceeding from the peace and stability of Syria and the Middle East, and from protecting the long-term, fundamental interests of the Syrian and Arab peoples.”
The spreading bloodshed in Syria, where government forces have been bombarding neighborhoods held by opposition forces, has turned into a broader test pitting Western powers against China and Russia over how forcefully the world should intervene in civil turmoil.
…more
February 27, 2012 No Comments
US agitates Syria collapse with no clear goal but ruination of Assad Regime – Nation in shables acceptable endpoint
No clear successor to Assad’s ‘coup-proof’ rule in Syria
27 February, 2012 – By Tabassum Zakaria – The Star
WASHINGTON: The Obama administration along with its Arab and European allies are trying to push Syria’s leader from power, but U.S. officials acknowledge they see no good candidates to replace him, either inside the government or from the nation’s fractured opposition.
That is due in no small part, the officials and experts on Syria said, to President Bashar Assad’s determination to “coup proof” his rule to ensure no challenge emerged from within.
With the Assad family facing the greatest challenge to its 41-year rule, Syrian security forces killing thousands of protesters and bystanders, and U.S. officials predicting the government will eventually fall, the question of who rules Syria has taken on added urgency.
But there is, in short, no heir apparent. And it is unclear if one will emerge anytime soon.
“The ruling establishment there is so entrenched and it is so self-interested, even if, and this is purely speculative, even if they overthrew Assad, it’s not clear that we would like his successor much more,” said a U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity. “There is no heir apparent.”
Similarly, among the rebels, “there is no opposition figure who has come out and become the face of Syrian resistance,” the official said.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton Friday tried to exacerbate any divisions within Syria’s elite, especially its security forces. “Their refusal to continue this slaughter will make them heroes in the eyes of not only Syrians but people of conscience everywhere,” Clinton said.
Yet privately, officials say Assad, his close family and their inner circle will try to hang on to power as long as possible.
The Assads and many other power-brokers in Damascus are from the minority Alawite sect that makes up just 12 percent of the Syrian population. Their fortunes are tied to the president’s.
There is also family history. The Syrian leader’s late father, Hafez Assad, seized power as a result of a bloodless coup in 1970 and became the unquestioned ruler the following year.
“The Assads have been planning for this for 40 years, for a Sunni uprising against them. And that’s why they’ve poured family members and sectarian members into the top upper ranks. It’s all about loyalty to coup-proof this regime,” said Joshua Landis, a professor at the University of Oklahoma who writes a newsletter on Syrian politics.
February 27, 2012 No Comments