…from beneath the crooked bough, witness 230 years of brutal tyranny by the al Khalifas come to an end
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King Hamad’s latest Royal Decree: “Oranges may be placed under arrest as terrorists”

“Abbas, these fruits do not seem too dangerous to me, are you sure they are terrorists?”

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When Armed Forces come to pillage and gas your homes and you resist, is this not self defense?

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Arabic-to-English, Patrick Henry said “don’t fire until you see the whites of thier eyes”, not “they’ll fire when they see the whites of your eyes” – ouch!

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Alkhawaja “freedom or death” Hunger Strike Reaches Extremely Dangerous Stage – still fighting the good fight!

ABDULHADI ALKHAWAJA, STILL ON “FREEDOM OR DEATH” HUNGER STRIKE, THREATENED WITH “FORCE FEEDING”:

WAITROSE, CONSIDERED ONE OF UK’S MOST ETHICAL COMPANIES, BLINDLY OPENS 2ND STORE IN BAHRAIN:

INTERIOR MINISTER, SUFFERING AMNESIA ATTACK, TELLS TUNIS GATHERING “HOLY SITES – PROTECTING THEM IS OUR RESPONSIBILITY”:

28 YOUNG BAHRAINIS CHARGED WITH “ATTEMPTED MURDER” OF POLICE, 10 “CONFESSED”, 8 STILL ON THE RUN:

TIMELINE – 15th March 2012 12.57 GMT:

Abdulhadi Alkhawaja is now in the 35th day of his hunger strike and according to his lawyer, Mohamed al-Jishi, his condition has deteriorated so far that prison authorities are considering force-feeding him.

Sentenced to life imprisonment after a controversial trial in a military court, AlKhawaja is still waiting for a date for an appeal in a civilian court. The reality is that he may die before that day is reached.

AlKhawaja stopped drinking liquids as well for a few days last week after being visited by 2 people who he believed to be journalists but who subsequently contributed to a pro-government statement which implied he was “very well” and which gave a completely false picture of his current health.
http://www.petercliffordonline.com/bahrain-news

Free Abdulhadi AlKhawaja – courtesy @AliCartoon

“We believe that his hunger strike is not exposing him thus far to imminent danger,” a group called Mabadi said in a statement published in the pro-government al-Ayyam daily.

He is now back drinking again, up to a litre a day of water containing glucose and salts, but steadfastly refusing to eat food in his “freedom or death” hunger strike.

The death of AlKhawaja, who is an internationally known and a respected human rights campaigner and also a Danish citizen, is likely to cause a huge back-lash in Bahrain where he has a very large following.

The Danish Ambassador, who is based in Riyadh, the capital of Saudi Arabia, had meetings with senior Bahraini Government officials this week, including the Foreign Minister, but the subjects within those discussions are not known. Danish consular staff have visited Khawaja in prison several times during his hunger strike.

Following his arrest on April 8th 2011, AlKhawaja was beaten and abused many times, completely breaking his jaw, which is now held together with metal plates and screws, beaten on the soles of the feet and even sodomised with a stick. …more

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Bahrain’s Foreign National Police Force – taunt and terrorize Peaceful Protesters and Village Residents alike

Saudi-backed forces attack Bahraini protesters in Sitra
15 March, 2012 – Shia Post

Saudi-backed regime forces in Bahrain have once again attacked peaceful anti-government demonstrators as Manama’s crackdown on the country’s popular uprising continues.

Regime forces fired teargas and sound grenades on Thursday to disperse protesters on the eastern island of Sitra.

The protesters were shouting slogans against the ruling Al Khalifa family and calling for the downfall of the US-backed regime.

Meanwhile, activists in Bahrain released footage showing Saudi-backed forces throwing Molotov cocktails in residential areas.

It also shows regime forces throwing petrol bombs at protesters.

Activists say that police usually harass protesters in a bid to provoke a fight-back.

The incident comes days after a mass demonstration by Bahraini protesters indicated the government’s efforts to dampen the popular uprising in the Persian Gulf Island nation have been futile.

On March 9, Hundreds of thousands of people held a mass rally outside the Bahraini capital, where they denounced the dictatorial rule of the Al Khalifa dynasty and demanded the ruling family to step down. They also called for an immediate release of all political prisoners.

Scores of people have been killed in the crackdown on anti-regime rallies that broke out last February, while thousands more have been arrested. …more

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Timoney, Yates Trained Police Force Provoke , Fire Bomb Village Young People

Protesters attacked in Sitra; Pakistani riot police throw Molotov cocktails
15 March, 2012 – Shia Post

Saudi-backed regime forces in Bahrain have again attacked peaceful anti-government demonstrators as Manama’s crackdown on the country’s popular uprising continues.

Regime forces fired teargas and sound grenades on Thursday to disperse protesters on the eastern island of Sitra.

The protesters were shouting slogans against the ruling Al Khalifa family and calling for the downfall of the US-backed regime.

Meanwhile, activists in Bahrain released footage showing Pakistani nationalist Bahrain- forces throwing Molotov cocktails in residential areas.

While attacking in residential area they were also speaking Pakistani regional language.

It also shows regime forces throwing petrol bombs at protesters.

Activists say that police usually harass protesters in a bid to provoke a fight-back.

The incident comes days after a mass demonstration by Bahraini protesters indicated the government’s efforts to dampen the popular uprising in the Persian Gulf Island nation have been futile.

On March 9, Hundreds of thousands of people held a mass rally outside the Bahraini capital, where they denounced the dictatorial rule of the Al Khalifa dynasty and demanded the ruling family to step down. They also called for an immediate release of all political prisoners.

Scores of people have been killed in the crackdown on anti-regime rallies that broke out last February, while thousands more have been arrested. …more

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US Right-wing Media Conduits Step-up Rhetoric against Bahrain Opposition

Bahrain vs. the Media
Morgan Lorraine Roach – 15 March, 2012 – The Foundary

Bahraini pro-reform protesters march during a rally in Maksha village west of the Bahraini capital Manama on December 30, 2011.

Since the uprising erupted last year, Bahrain has continued to experience unrest. Despite continuing reforms by the government, the opposition movement has steadily hardened its stance against the al-Khalifa monarchy.

Last weekend, protests in Bahrain escalated in one of the most violent confrontations between the opposition movement and police. Tens of thousands blocked King Faisal Highway, the main thoroughfare to Manama’s financial district, demanding an end to the al-Khalifa monarchy.

The government of Bahrain has responded to the unrest using a number of tactics, including restricting the media (international and domestic) and the Internet. This week, Reporters without Borders released its annual “Enemies of the Internet” report highlighting the government of Bahrain as one of the worst offenders.

Bahrain’s abuse of bloggers and journalists as well as extreme measures for handling protestors, including allegations of torture and murder, cannot be excused. Although the government is working toward reform, particularly following the release of the report by the Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry, the process has been slow and not has kept pace with the growing demands of the opposition.

On the other side of the debate, Bahrain’s opposition movement isn’t necessarily as innocent and well-meaning as the media portray it. Opposition members, particularly those who are part of the February 14th Movement, have wreaked havoc on the streets. Leading figures such as the influential cleric Sheikh Isa Qassim have incited violence against police and have contributed to Bahrain’s instability. Armed with Molotov cocktails and homemade weapons, protestors have injured not only police officers but also innocent bystanders.

The international media have tended to take a very superficial view of the events in Bahrain, failing to take Bahrain’s complex history and political dynamics into consideration. When I was in Bahrain last January, many Bahrainis expressed their frustration with international coverage of the crisis. One of their criticisms was the media’s lumping of Bahrain into the rest of the “Arab Spring” countries. …more

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The external threat only APCs Obama sold via BAE Turkey-US Ltd. – deployed against protesters

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What Baharini kids do when they’re not at the Mosque studying the Qur’an

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Good Soldiers know how to adapt and improvise to regime reform plans

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Riot Police begin regime reform plan – same as last time, maybe better trained to kill with gas projectiles

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Bahrain shuns advice to dismiss charges and free medics, will now retry doctors and nurses in sham civilian trials

Bahrain to retry 20 doctors, nurses convicted after treating wounded uprising protesters
By Associated Press – 15 March, 2012

MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — Twenty Bahraini medical professionals convicted on uprising-linked charges and sentenced to prison terms face retrial in civilian courts, a lawyer said Thursday.Lawyer Jalila al-Sayed said a judge revoked last week’s decision to proceed with only five cases and refer the other 15 doctors and nurses to a medical disciplinary board. All were convicted of anti-state crimes during last year’s unrest.Even so, Bahraini authorities insisted the prosecutors will pursue charges only against five of the 20 health professionals. The discrepancy could not immediately be clarified.The 20 doctors and nurses treated wounded protesters during the Gulf kingdom’s uprising. Last year a special security court, set up during eight weeks of emergency rule in the Gulf kingdom, sentenced them to five to 15 years in prison.That court has been disbanded. Al-Sayed said the judge did not mention dropping charges against 15 medics during Thursday’s proceedings in a civilian court.The next hearing has been set for March 20. The case has drawn stiff criticism from human rights groups.Also Thursday, clashes between security forces and opposition supporters flared across the tiny but strategically important Gulf island that is the home of the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet.Riot police fired tear gas, stun grenades and rubber bullets at protesters, who were marking the first anniversary of the deployment of a Saudi-led military force in Bahrain.Some protesters threw firebombs at the riot police. There were no reports of injuries.The troops from the Sunni-ruled neighboring states were sent to Bahrain to help the Sunni monarchy quell dissent among the island nation’s majority Shiites. …source

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15 March – Protests Grow Louder, Stronger, more resolved regime must go!

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European Parliament condemns rights violations in Bahrain

European Parliament condemns rights violations in Bahrain, demands release of political prisoners
15 March , 2012 – Bahrain Justice and Development Moment

The Parliament of The European Union today voted to condemn human rights abuses in Bahrain and demanded the immediate and unconditional release of all political prisoners.

This motion for resolution was passed by MEP’s, cementing the institutions support for freedom in Bahrain. It specifically called on the Bahraini authorities to “stop the excessive use of violence, including excessive the use of tear gas, repression, acts of torture, unlawful detention and prosecution of peaceful protestors”.

The motion reiterated the Parliaments demand for the “immediate and unconditional release of all peaceful demonstrators, political activists, human rights defenders, doctors and paramedics, bloggers and journalists who have been detained or convicted for exercising their rights to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly or performing their professional obligations.”.

Hunger strike: Abdulhadi AlKhawaja

This includes human rights activist Abdulhadi Al Khawaja who is now on his 36th day of hunger strike and whose condition has now deteriorated to an extremely dangerous level.

Also mentioned by name is Mahdi Abu Deeb, the head of Bahrain’s teaching union, who has been in prison for more than 11 months. In september he was given a ten-year sentence, a jail term the European Parliament believes should be reversed.

As well as demanding an end to human rights violations, the Parliament also expressed that it finds the democratic aspirations of the Bahraini people “legitimate” and called on the Bahraini authorities to make the necessary reforms to achieve a social consensus.

It also called on EU member states to “suspend all military and security-related sales and assistance, including surveillance technologies to Bahrain” until Bahrain has implemented reforms. It welcomed the BICI report and it’s recommendations but urged Bahrain to swiftly implement, with a real focus to end the impunity enjoyed by it’s leaders.

The European Parliament has voted in the past to support the people of Bahrain, but naturally such votes will not necessarily transform into real political action.

We are hopeful that this can act as a source of encouragement for member states, as well as non-EU nations, to adopt similar motions and push the Bahrain Government to end violations and begin reforms.

Either way this shows the international disgust with Bahrain’s treatment of it’s people and is a promising sign that international pressure may finally be turning against the dictatorship.

March 15, 2012   No Comments

Iran sends plane load of ‘medical aid’ to Syria: Report

Iran sends planeload of ‘medical aid’ to Syria: report
15 March, 2012 – Agence France Presse – The Daily Star

TEHRAN: An Iranian aircraft carrying 40 tonnes of “medical aid” arrived in Syria on Thursday, the first of four such shipments destined for Tehran’s regional ally, the official IRNA news agency reported.

The cargo which arrived in Damascus early Thursday was to be handed over to the Syrian Red Crescent, the agency said, quoting the Iranian ambassador to Syria, Mohammad Reza Raouf Sheibani.

Sheibani said Thursday’s shipment included “medicines and medical equipment” and the subsequent shipments would comprise “food products, ambulances, tents and blankets.”

He said the deliveries were being made “in the framework of reinforcing the relations and support of Tehran to this country.”

Iran is standing fully behind the Syrian regime of President Bashar al-Assad as it battles armed rebel groups it describes as “terrorists”.

Tehran has voiced opposition to any foreign “interference” in Syria, and denied US allegations it is sending arms to Syria.

US officials have said they suspect Iran is providing Assad with arms, electronic monitoring equipment, intelligence and advice on how to crack down on the uprising.

“They are working earnestly to keep Assad in power,” General James Mattis, the head of the US military?s Central Command, told a Senate hearing last week, according to The New York Times newspaper.

“The aid from Iran is increasing, and is increasingly focused on lethal assistance,” The Washington Post newspaper quoted one unnamed official with access to intelligence reports from the region as saying early this month.

The head of Iran’s elite military Quds Force, Brigadier General Qassem Suleimani, has paid at least one visit to Damascus recently, the paper said, citing US officials.
…more

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Saudi Spring in the Making

A Saudi youth ‘awakening’?
Postnoon News – 15 March, 2012

Seventy percent of the Saudi population is under 30, and as many as 40 per cent of those young people are unemployed. According to the kingdom’s own statistics, holding a college degree almost doubles the chances of failing to find a job.

The frustration of being young and Saudi, led by a monarchy viewed by critics as arrogant, incompetent and repressive, is finally producing a youth protest movement in a country where public dissidence is exceedingly rare and severely punished.

Last week 1,000 female students at King Khalid University rallied against the school’s president after the university cancelled its cleaning services and garbage began to pile up and stink in the intense Saudi heat. The demonstration was dispersed with batons and water hoses, injuring more than 50 women. Then on Saturday an estimated 500 male students took up the cause, calling for the resignation of university president Abdullah Al-Rashid.

Some of the protesters told media outlets that their demands were not political, expressing loyalty to Saudi King Abdullah.

But local governor Prince Faisal bin Khaled condemned the protests, warning, “We will not be lenient with anyone, whoever may it be, who play with the security of the country.”

Amnesty International reported this week that the Saudi government continues to incarcerate at least six men who had planned to take part in a ‘Day of Rage’ last March 11. Only one of the men is believed to have actually demonstrated and Amnesty’s Middle East director Philip Luther said the year-long detentions were preposterous.

“Holding people for a year merely for intending to protest is completely unconscionable,” he said.

Saudi Arabia has largely resisted the ‘Arab Awakening’ that swept the region in 2011, as the royal family used a combination of force and distribution of subsidies to nullify protest. King Abdullah has announced limited social and judicial reforms in recent years, including granting women the right to vote last September. But Saudi women are still banned from driving cars, running businesses or entering major government buildings and must cover themselves in head scarves and abayas in public.

Saudi remains a highly conservative society rooted in the very conservative Wahhabist Islamic tradition and led in part by the ulema — a body of Islamic religious leaders. …more

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Bloomberg Partners with ORVIS to Spin a new era of Rhetoric and Reform

Bahrain Issues New Code of Conduct for Police, IAA Says
By Donna Abu-Nasr – 15 March, 2012 – Bloomberg

Bahrain issued a new code of conduct for police officers force requiring adherence to 10 principles, including limited use of force and zero tolerance toward torture and mistreatment, the Information Affairs Agency said today.

The Interior Ministry code, recommended by an independent international commission that investigated possible human-rights abuses during the February-March 2011 protests, states that officers must show respect for human dignity and make arrests in accordance with international standards. It forbids the use of force “except when absolutely necessary,” state-run IAA said.

“This code of conduct represents a new social treaty between members of Bahraini society and the police which will mark the start of a new era and a correct path to building bridges of confidence between the united Bahraini society and the police, Interior Minister Sheikh Rashid said in the statement.

A new Internal Affairs Department being established within the Interior Ministry will be responsible for disciplinary reviews, as well as overseeing the new code, according to the statement.

Last year’s mass protests, led by Bahrain’s Shiite majority, included demands for democracy and equal rights from the Sunni monarchy, leading to a crackdown by security forces in which troops from neighboring Saudi Arabia, also ruled by Sunnis, were called in to help.

At least 35 people were killed during the rallies and an ensuing crackdown through April last year, the independent commission has said. Tensions in the island nation have simmered in Shiite areas throughout the past year.

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13 March, 2011 King Hamad launches forces to engage in unrestrained brutality

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“Freedom or Death”, Free Alkhawaja Now

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Bahrain Pulls a Qaddafi and Who was Qaddafi?

It is heartbreaking to see a renegade country like Libya shoot pro-democracy protesters. But it’s even more wrenching to watch America’s ally, Bahrain, pull a Qaddafi and use American tanks, guns and tear gas as well as foreign mercenaries to crush a pro-democracy movement — as we stay mostly silent.

Bahrain Pulls a Qaddafi
16 March, 2011 – By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF – NYT

In Bahrain in recent weeks, I’ve seen corpses of protesters who were shot at close range, seen a teenage girl writhing in pain after being clubbed, seen ambulance workers beaten for trying to rescue protesters — and in the last few days it has gotten much worse. Saudi Arabia, in a slap at American efforts to defuse the crisis, dispatched troops to Bahrain to help crush the protesters. The result is five more deaths, by the count of The Associated Press.

One video from Bahrain appears to show security forces shooting an unarmed middle-aged man in the chest with a tear gas canister at a range of a few feet. The man collapses and struggles to get up. And then they shoot him with a canister in the head. Amazingly, he survived.

Today the United States is in a vise — caught between our allies and our values. And the problem with our pal Bahrain is not just that it is shooting protesters but also that it is something like an apartheid state. Sunni Muslims rule the country, and now they are systematically trying to crush an overwhelmingly Shiite protest movement.

My New York Times colleague Michael Slackman was caught by Bahrain security forces a few weeks ago. He said that they pointed shotguns at him and that he was afraid they were about to shoot when he pulled out his passport and shouted that he was an American journalist. Then, he says, the mood changed abruptly and the leader of the group came over and took Mr. Slackman’s hand, saying warmly: “Don’t worry! We love Americans!”

“We’re not after you. We’re after Shia,” the policeman added. Mr. Slackman recalls: “It sounded like they were hunting rats.”

All this is tragic because the ruling al-Khalifa family can be justly proud of what it has built in Bahrain, including a prosperous and dynamic society, a highly educated work force and a society in which women are far better off than next door in Saudi Arabia. On a good day, Bahrain feels like an oasis of moderation in a tough region.

Yet you can parachute blindfolded into almost any neighborhood in Bahrain and tell immediately whether it is Sunni or Shiite. The former enjoy better roads and public services. And it’s almost impossible for Shiites to be hired by the army or police. Doesn’t that sound like an echo of apartheid?

It is true that Bahrain’s protesters have behaved in ways that have undermined their cause. They frequently chant “Death to al-Khalifa” — a toxic slogan that should offend everyone. And some protesters have targeted Pakistanis and other South Asians who often work for security services. …more

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14 March, 2011 Sitra Martyr

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13 March Bahrain Incident on Bridge

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Police Gas Villages at School Time in Sitra

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Unjust Detention and Trails in Bahrain Continue Unabated

University students sentenced to 15 years imprisonment and ongoing sham trials
14 March, 2012 – Bahrain Center for Human Rights

The Bahrain Center for Human Rights expresses its grave concern over the continuous human rights violations against university students in Bahrain. A year past the start of the revolution, university students are still being subjected to injustice, unfair trials, arrests and torture.

On February 14 2011, Bahraini youth started to demand democracy and freedom from the oppressive Al Khalifa regime. Most of these youth were targeted even before the declaration of Martial Law in March, through a government-sponsored thug attack of the pro-democracy students at the University of Bahrain (UOB) during a planned protest which took place on March 13 2011. Following the state of emergency, the government targeted students in a fierce crackdown; more than 500 were expelled, many were arrested, tortured and put through sham trials. At least 6 UOB students were sentenced to 15 years imprisonment in an unfair trial lacking evidence.

Human chain formed by male students on 13 March 2011 to protect their female classmate from being attacked by government- sponsored thugs (Dr. Mike Diboll blog[1])

As a former professor at the University of Bahrain who was present at the time of the thug attack on March 13, Dr. Diboll recalls, they were “carrying blunt or sharp-edged weapons including axes, swords, golf clubs, iron bars, heavy chains, and baseball bats.” [2] Students were violently attacked without any protection from university security nor police forces, who only interfered when the attack was over. On that day at least 80 students were wounded and transferred to the nearby health center, although the majority was suffering from suffocation due to teargas. However, there were a few serious injuries. Mohammed Abdulmahdi, a 19 year old Applied Studies student in UOB, was hit on the head with a sharp weapon. It caused him to go into coma for around 100 days. When he woke up, he lost his ability to speak[3].

Mohammed Abdulmahdi, 19 years, lost the ability to speak after being attacked by government thugs.

Based on the 13 March thug attack incident at the University of Bahrain, the actions taken by the university administration, Ministry of Education and Ministry of Interior, are a clear violation of human rights. There are around 11 cases related to the 13 March incident at UOB. More than a 100 students are being put on sham trials. Human rights violations against students are still ongoing. The cases include:
(1) 6 students sentenced to 15 years imprisonment

6 university students were sentenced 15 years imprisonment and a fine of 349,300 dinars (about 925,000 U.S. dollars) in a National Safety Court. The appeal hearing of the 6 university students at the High appeal Supreme Court was on 5 March 2012. Five of these students have been detained for almost a year now:

1. Jawad Al Mahary: 24 years old, law student who was arrested on 29 March 2011.
2. Shawqi Radhi: 21 years old, Business major. Arrested on 26 April 2011 after his house was raided.
3. Jassim Al Hulaini: 19 years old. He studies in the Teachers college and was arrested on 27 March 2011 during a house raid.
4. Jassim AlMukhodher: 20 years old, Teachers college student. He was arrested on 26 April 2011 in a House raid.
5. Yousif Ahmed: 20 years old, arrested on 26 April 2011 after his house was raided. He is a Business student.[4]

They were accused of intentional burning, attempted murder and stealing, and in that regard were unfairly detained for almost a year. They were severely tortured and forced into false confession under torture, as confirmed by the BICI report (link to previous statement in Jan 2012). …more

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