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Posts from — January 2013

Bahrian MOI conjures imagery of sophitcated remote control bombing against its Militarized Saudi Sponsored Police Force

Policemen hurt by home-made bomb in Bahrain: government
31 January, 2013 – Reuters

(Reuters) – Several policemen were injured when a home-made bomb exploded at a roundabout west of the Bahraini capital Manama on Wednesday, the prime minister was quoted as saying.

Sheikh Khalifa bin Salman al-Khalifa said the explosion happened at Budaiya Highway “leaving a number of policemen injured whilst on duty”, the official Bahrain News Agency reported late on Wednesday.

A Ministry of Interior message on Twitter put the number of wounded at three and described the device as remotely-detonated and home-made. Both the ministry and Sheikh Khalifa described the explosion as a “terror” incident.

Bahraini police say they have been the target of numerous attacks with homemade bombs since April 2012, including one that killed a policeman in October.

The Sunni Muslim-dominated government has been struggling since early last year to end pro-democracy unrest led mainly by the Gulf Arab kingdom’s majority Shi’ite Muslims.

Five home-made bombs killed two people in Bahrain on November 5, and the U.S.-aligned government said the attacks bore the hallmarks of Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant group allied with Iran.

Iran dismisses Bahraini accusations of involvement in the political unrest. Hezbollah also denies involvement, but has criticized the government’s handling of protests.

Sheikh Khalifa said that Bahrain would remain stable and its citizens “would foil any terror plot targeting Bahrain to subvert its security,” BNA reported. …more

January 31, 2013   No Comments

Echos of Ireland’s Bloody Sunday

Indiscriminate violence against Malian civilians by French forces and their local allies belies the ostensible claim of “protecting lives” and points to an alternative purpose – a criminal imperialist power-grab. If this is so, then inevitably there will be further reports of violations, in which case, the French will find their African intrigue facing a turning point of rising popular armed resistance in Mali, as the British found on Bloody Sunday in Derry in 1972.”

Ireland’s bloody Sunday: A warning for Mali
29 January, 2013 – By Finian Cunningham

This week sees the anniversary of one of the worst massacres in modern Irish history, when British paratroopers murdered 14 unarmed civilians in cold blood.

On 30 January 1972, the British troops opened fire on a civil rights march in Derry City, Northern Ireland’s second city after Belfast, in full glare of the international news media.

Half of the victims that day were teenagers, shot in the head or in the back by British snipers. Some of the fatally wounded were shot multiple times as they tried to crawl to safety. Others were cut down in a hail of bullets as they tended to those lying wounded, bleeding on the ground.

One iconic image from that horrific day shows a Catholic priest, Fr Edward Daly, holding up a bloodstained white cloth, pleading with the British soldiers to cease-fire as he helped carry a dying youth.

Bloody Sunday, as it became known, was a watershed event. From then on, the conflict in Northern Ireland exploded. Some 3,000 people would lose their lives in the ensuing decades of violence – a huge death toll for the tiny population, equivalent to 240,000 in Iran or 900,000 in the United States.

Many Irish citizens, outraged by the British army slaughter, went on to join the ranks of the newly formed Provisional Irish Republican Army, the armed guerrilla movement that would kill hundreds of British troops and police and take the war to the very streets of London, with massive bombing campaigns in the British capital and other major cities.

On 27 August 1979, seven years later, the IRA exacted its revenge for Bloody Sunday with a devastating double attack on the British establishment. Lord Louis Mountbatten, cousin of Queen Elizabeth, was murdered when his pleasure boat was blown to pieces off the west coast of Ireland. Meanwhile, on the same day, over on the east coast, in Warrenpoint, Co Down, a convoy of British paratroopers – the army’s elite regiment – was ambushed in a multiple explosion claiming the lives of 18 soldiers. It was the biggest single loss of British troops in the Northern Ireland conflict.

Looking at France’s current military offensive in the West African country of Mali one wonders if the same kind of blowback awaits the French government? News media restrictions by the French authorities over air and ground attacks in Mali have failed to conceal disturbing reports of civilian casualties and atrocities – only three weeks into that conflict.

Human rights groups, such as Amnesty International, say they have “credible evidence” of dozens of extrajudicial killings of Tuareg civilians by French-backed forces in Mali. Atrocities are being reported from at least three locations in central Mali, in Mopti, Sévaré and Konna, the latter being the town which separatist Tuareg rebels overran on 10 January, thus allegedly sparking the Paris government to launch a full-scale military invasion of its former colony.

There is a disquieting parallel with past events in Northern Ireland, in particular the massacre of Bloody Sunday. The turning point of that event was that the bloodshed exposed the myth for why the British army had been officially sent to Northern Ireland in the first place – “to restore peace and protect civilians.”

Prior to the arrival of the British troops, the British-controlled Northern Ireland saw an outbreak of violence in the summer of 1968 when Nationalists began agitating for equal civil rights under the corrupt pro-British Unionist administration. Peaceful demonstrations by Nationalists were subsequently attacked by Unionist gangs and paramilitaries, aided and abetted by the sectarian state police force. Many civilians were killed as Nationalist communities were shot at and burned out of their homes and workplaces in reprisals over their political demands.

The Unionist-dominated province of Northern Ireland brought international disgrace to the United Kingdom, and the London government was obliged to post thousands of British soldiers “to restore order”. At first, Nationalist communities welcomed the British troops when they were deployed in August 1969, believing the army to be affording protection from marauding Unionist paramilitaries and police. …more

January 31, 2013   No Comments

Regime Offer of Dialogue “not serious” with Majority of Opposition Leaders in Prisons

January 29, 2013   No Comments

Dialogue of brutality as Bahrain regime turns Manama into a terror zone to silence dissent

Saudi backed troops Bahraini regime turns Manama into a terror zone
27 January, 2013 – SHAFAQNA

SHAFAQNA (Shia International News Association) — On Friday, the regime in Bahrain conducted mass arrests amidst its brutal crackdown on citizens who gathered in the heart of the Capital Manama to protest for democracy demanding an end to the dictatorial tyrannical rule. The regime deployed civil militias backed by security forces and mercenaries, in large numbers, and set military roadblocks imposing a strict security cordon on the Capital on Friday morning ahead of a scheduled protest for 3:30pm. The regime forces chased the citizens in Manama alleys and attacked them with different grenades terrorizing citizens and the residents in the area. Among the big number of arrests was a religious figure and member of the central body of the Olamaa Islamic Council, Sheik Fadhil al-Zaki. Al-Zaki wa handcuffed and held arrested in a humiliating manner during the protests. Al-Wefaq National Islamic Society stated that this reflects the regime’s hostility against religious figures. Al-Wefaq demanded his immediate release along with the tens of citizens who were arrested at the Manama protests last Friday. …source

January 29, 2013   No Comments

Hamad has only burtal crackdown, banned potests, prisoners, lies and broken promises to show toward “democratic reform”

Ayatollah Isa Qassim: Two years since the beginning of the revolution in Bahrain & nor a step toward reform
27 January, 2013 – ABNA.co

The second part of Friday Prayers Sermon for Senior Bahraini cleric Ayatollah Shaikh Isa Ahmed Qassim Imam of the Grand Mosque in Duraz (Imam Al-Sadiq Garand Mosque).

Ayatollah Isa Qassim: Two years since the beginning of the revolution in Bahrain & nor a step toward reform
Laudable Stance..

The politics in Bahrain worked on fueling the spirit of sectarianism and creating sectarian divide as well as sectarian clashes especially when the movement for demands and reform began – and this led to turn the conflict from its political nature to sectarian nature. The dispute which was between government and people turned to a popular conflict between two sects as the authority begs the support from one sect at the expanse of the another sect.

There have been voices which benefit from this situation and therefore they supported the authority’s trend which is based on creating hatreds and igniting the fire of sedition and sectarianism as much as it is possible. This trend serves the sectarian divide in more than one Islamic and Arab country and helps the success of this divide which leads these poor countries to devastation.

However, the opposition here was and still is smart, thanks to its laudable, honorable, and blessed stance as it stood stubbornly against this approach and initially maintained the objective of the national Islamic unity. The opposition did not respond to the provocations of the authority and its followers – who were trying to ignite the fire of sedition and turn the course of events from the political track to the sectarian track. The opposition stepped away from everything that serves this destructive goal or any initiative which is about to burn this beloved homeland.

On the other hand, the provocations of the government and its followers tried to target that street of opposition – however, this street was smarter and did not meet any effort made on the path of that destructive goal. The opposition is pious and devout in a way that it does not accept to start a battle with their brothers in religion and homeland – a battle which the two parties will lose for the interest of the third party which wants to harm both of them – while this third party knows that God does not accept this division and this strife.

The stance of this street which was wanted from it to confront their brothers – was honorable, blessed, and deserves appreciation from each one fair monitor. …more

January 29, 2013   No Comments

Protest Banned and Crushed is Dialogue Silenced

Bahrainis Protest Dialogue, Dispersed By Police
26 January, 2013 – POMED

Police used tear gas and stun grenades in Manama yesterday to break up protests organized by Shi’ite opposition groups. The Interior Ministry had previously refused to give permission for the demonstration, claiming it was illegal and promising punishment for participants. The groups called for protests in spite of their decision to participate in reconciliation talks proposed by the government. A spokesman for al Wefaq, the main opposition party, said, “Agreeing to dialogue doesn’t mean that we stop our protests.” Friday’s protests called for rejection of these government-proposed talks.

Opposition groups have voiced concerns about the talks since the government issued the invitation. Some have objected to the talks due to the government’s role as a moderator rather than a participant in them, claiming the government is the only entity that can implement any agreements regarding the parties’ demands for social and political reform. Wefaq leader Khalil al-Marzook also expressed caution regarding the credibility of the process.

A government official stated on Saturday that talks will begin next week or early in February. …source

January 29, 2013   No Comments

Bahraini Opposition Leader: Time Ripe for Al-Khalifa’s Collapse

Bahraini Opposition Leader: Time Ripe for Al-Khalifa’s Collapse
29 January, 2013 – FARS

TEHRAN (FNA)- A senior leader of the February 14 Coalition opposition group in Bahrain said people are resolved to continue protests against the al-Khalifa rulers and the regime is on the brink of collapse.

“It is now the time that the idol of Bahrain and al-Khalifa dictatorship as the US puppet in the Persian Gulf gets shattered and Bahrain’s future government be formed and established again with the presence of all political and religious spectrums in the election,” Sheikh Issa bin Ali al-Jamri told FNA on Saturday.

He said that despite all the medieval-like tortures and suppression of protestors by the al-Khalifa regime, the Bahraini people are steadfast in their move for changing their country’s ruling system and materializing all their goals.

Anti-government protesters have been holding peaceful demonstrations across Bahrain since mid-February 2011, calling for an end to the Al Khalifa dynasty’s over-40-year rule.

Violence against the defenseless people escalated after a Saudi-led conglomerate of police, security and military forces from the Persian Gulf Cooperation Council (PGCC) member states – Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Oman and Qatar – were dispatched to the tiny Persian Gulf kingdom on March 13 to help Manama crack down on peaceful protestors.

So far, tens of people have been killed, hundreds have gone missing and more than 1,000 others have been injured. …source

January 29, 2013   No Comments

Bahrain Oppositon, No Dialogue with Killers

Bahrain clashes show divides over proposed talks
By REEM KHALIFA – Associated Press – 24 January, 2013

MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — Riot police in Bahrain fired tear gas and stun grenades at anti-government protesters whose chants included calls to reject proposed talks aimed at easing nearly two years of unrest in the Gulf nation.

Thursday’s clashes were relatively small, with several hundred protesters demonstrating near Sitra, south of the capital Manama. But they highlight the divides among Bahrain’s Shiite-led opposition over whether to accept the Sunni monarchy’s offers for dialogue.

Appeals to open talks have received a cautious endorsement from main Shiite opposition groups in the strategic nation, which is home to the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet. Other anti-government factions, including youth groups, appear to oppose dialogue, claiming the Sunni leadership is unwilling to give up power.

More than 55 people have been killed in the unrest. …more

January 29, 2013   No Comments

Deaths follow Punishing Menace from German Supplied Chemical Gas to brutal Bahrain Regime

Bahrain’s Police Use South African Tear Gas From German-Controlled Company
29 January, 2013 – by Bill Marczak – Bahrain Watch

This type of canister is manufactured by Rheinmetall Denel Munition (Pty) Ltd, or one of its predecessor companies. Rheinmetall Denel is 51%-owned by Germany company Rheinmetall Waffe Munition GmbH, and 49%-owned by South African company Denel (Pty) Ltd. Despite the joint ownership, all of Rheinmetall Denel’s operations seem to be located in South Africa. Rheinmetall Denel was formed in 2008 when Rheinmetall acquired a 51% stake in Denel Munitions, a Denel subsidiary. Before Rheinmetall Denel, Bahrain Watch understands that this type of canister was manufactured by Swartklip Products, part of Denel Munitions. Rheinmetall Denel now operates the Swartklip plant. A division of Rheinmetall is also the manufacturer of the MK-13 flashbangs used by police.

Protesters claim that police fire this type of tear gas canister from their six-shot semiautomatic tear gas launchers (referred to as “C4″ or “Y2 MK1″ weapons by protesters). Visual evidence also appears to support this claim. The weapon appears to be visually identical to the 40mm Multiple Anti Riot (MAR), manufactured by South African-based Milkor. …source

January 29, 2013   No Comments

Entertaining America – Torture Porn, Slaughter of Kindergartners, Unbridled Weapons Sales, Arms and Gas to murderous Sauds and Child killing King in Bahrain

Zero Dark Thirty: Hollywood’s gift to American power
The Guardian – 25 January, 2013 – Slavoj Žižek

Here is how, in a letter to the LA Times, Kathryn Bigelow justified Zero Dark Thirty’s depicting of the torture methods used by government agents to catch and kill Osama bin Laden: “Those of us who work in the arts know that depiction is not endorsement. If it was, no artist would be able to paint inhumane practices, no author could write about them, and no filmmaker could delve into the thorny subjects of our time.”

Really? One doesn’t need to be a moralist, or naive about the urgencies of fighting terrorist attacks, to think that torturing a human being is in itself something so profoundly shattering that to depict it neutrally – ie to neutralise this shattering dimension – is already a kind of endorsement.

Imagine a documentary that depicted the Holocaust in a cool, disinterested way as a big industrial-logistic operation, focusing on the technical problems involved (transport, disposal of the bodies, preventing panic among the prisoners to be gassed). Such a film would either embody a deeply immoral fascination with its topic, or it would count on the obscene neutrality of its style to engender dismay and horror in spectators. Where is Bigelow here?

Without a shadow of a doubt, she is on the side of the normalisation of torture. When Maya, the film’s heroine, first witnesses waterboarding, she is a little shocked, but she quickly learns the ropes; later in the film she coldly blackmails a high-level Arab prisoner with, “If you don’t talk to us, we will deliver you to Israel”. Her fanatical pursuit of Bin Laden helps to neutralise ordinary moral qualms. Much more ominous is her partner, a young, bearded CIA agent who masters perfectly the art of passing glibly from torture to friendliness once the victim is broken (lighting his cigarette and sharing jokes). There is something deeply disturbing in how, later, he changes from a torturer in jeans to a well-dressed Washington bureaucrat. This is normalisation at its purest and most efficient – there is a little unease, more about the hurt sensitivity than about ethics, but the job has to be done. This awareness of the torturer’s hurt sensitivity as the (main) human cost of torture ensures that the film is not cheap rightwing propaganda: the psychological complexity is depicted so that liberals can enjoy the film without feeling guilty. This is why Zero Dark Thirty is much worse than 24, where at least Jack Bauer breaks down at the series finale.

The debate about whether waterboarding is torture or not should be dropped as an obvious nonsense: why, if not by causing pain and fear of death, does waterboarding make hardened terrorist-suspects talk? The replacement of the word “torture” with “enhanced interrogation technique” is an extension of politically correct logic: brutal violence practised by the state is made publicly acceptable when language is changed.

The most obscene defence of the film is the claim that Bigelow rejects cheap moralism and soberly presents the reality of the anti-terrorist struggle, raising difficult questions and thus compelling us to think (plus, some critics add, she “deconstructs” feminine cliches – Maya displays no sentimentality, she is tough and dedicated to her task like men). But with torture, one should not “think”. A parallel with rape imposes itself here: what if a film were to show a brutal rape in the same neutral way, claiming that one should avoid cheap moralism and start to think about rape in all its complexity? Our guts tell us that there is something terribly wrong here; I would like to live in a society where rape is simply considered unacceptable, so that anyone who argues for it appears an eccentric idiot, not in a society where one has to argue against it. The same goes for torture: a sign of ethical progress is the fact that torture is “dogmatically” rejected as repulsive, without any need for argument.

So what about the “realist” argument: torture has always existed, so is it not better to at least talk publicly about it? This, exactly, is the problem. If torture was always going on, why are those in power now telling us openly about it? There is only one answer: to normalise it, to lower our ethical standards.

Torture saves lives? Maybe, but for sure it loses souls – and its most obscene justification is to claim that a true hero is ready to forsake his or her soul to save the lives of his or her countrymen. The normalisation of torture in Zero Dark Thirty is a sign of the moral vacuum we are gradually approaching. If there is any doubt about this, try to imagine a major Hollywood film depicting torture in a similar way 20 years ago. It is unthinkable.
…source

January 28, 2013   No Comments

Dialogue seeking Regime arrests 43 people holding dialogue in streets of Manama

Bahrain: Few Days after Call for Dialogue, 43 people arrested for protesting in Manama
28 January, 2013 – ABNA.co

(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) – On 25 Jan 2012 hundreds of Bahrainis took the streets in the capital Manama and peacefully protested to demand rights, including the right to self-determination, despite restrictions. The Ministry of Interior set up security checkpoints and road blocks on streets leading to the capital to restrict access. Despite the restrictions, people managed to get into Manama, and were violently attacked by a large number of security forces with tear gas and stun grenades, which also impacted people passing by and the shop keepers in the old market. Tear gas was shot from close distance on the people in the narrow allies of Manama crowded with protesters and shoppers.

The Ministry of interior has called the protest “illegal” in a statement, criminalizing freedom of assembly, at a time when Bahraini law only requires a notification rather than authorization for rallies.

Members of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights have recorded at least two cases of injuries from stun grenades, one male victim who was shot in his leg, and one female who was shot in her shoulder from the back.

A policeman was caught on video slapping a Bahraini citizen, Abdulla Alsaba’a, who is a member of a political opposition society in Bahrain, before he got arrested.

Reporters of international media covering the protest were not saved from assaults and harassments. Mazen Mahdi, EPA photojournalist reported that he was hit by a police sound grenade which was thrown blindly into the crowd. He sustained a minor injury. In addition he was stopped twice for ID check in Manama by the same security unit, in what appeared to be an attempt to hamper his work.

Mass arrests were conducted by riot police accompanied with dogs. According to lawyer Reem Khalaf who was present at AlHoora police station, 43 people were arrested including a Saudi man and an injured man. All of them were held overnight. 15 detainees were interrogated at the public prosecution on Saturday, and the rest were interrogated on Sunday. They all received a 45 day detention order pending investigation on charges of “illegal gathering”, “participating in an unauthorized demonstration” and “disobeying the authorities when asked to disperse”.
Among the detainees is a blogger and activist Nader Abdulemam (@NaderAbdulEmam) who was threatened with arrest few days ago over twitter from a pro-government anonymous user. In addition to the above-mentioned charges, Nader is also accused with incitement to participate in unauthorized march.

Faisal Mushaima was arrested and taken to the Bahrain-Gateway (Bab AlBahrain) police station. When his brother, Abdulhadi Mushaima, an elderly man and the father of Ali Mushima, the first victim of extra judicial killing by police on Feb 14, 2011, went to check on him, he was also arrested and told that he is “wanted” by the police. He was kept in detention for several hours and he was moved to the clinic at the ministry of interior as he suffered from a high level of diabetes. He was later released due to his health deterioration.

A member of the Bahrain Society for Human Rights, Hussain Radhi, was arrested while he was monitoring the protests and documenting human rights violations.

A member of the Islamic Scholars Council, cleric Fadhil AlZaki was also arrested. …more

January 28, 2013   No Comments

The Bahraini Government, Supported by the United States, is Snuffing out Life and Liberty in Bahrain

January 28, 2013   No Comments

Hear no Evil, See no Evil in Bahrain or do time in Hamad’s torturous Prisons

Authorities cracking down hard on news providers again
28 January, 2013 – Amnesty International

Reporters Without Borders voices renewed concern about news providers in Bahrain, in particular, Ahmed Humaidan, a photographer detained since 29 December, and Sayed Yousef Al-Muhafda, a human rights activist who will go on trial tomorrow on charges of circulating false news (LINK).

“We are sounding the alarm about the recent arrests of journalists and human rights activists in Bahrain and we condemn the government’s nearly two-year-old policy of harsh repression,” Reporters Without Borders said. “The authorities clearly want to obstruct journalists and prevent the flow of information about demonstrations and their suppression by the security forces.”

Vice-president of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights and head of its documentation department, Al-Muhafda was arrested on 17 December and was held for a month before finally being released on 17 January pending trial.

He is charged with deliberately disseminating false news on Twitter with the aim of inciting violence because, on 17 December, he posted a photo taken on 14 December of a young injured demonstrator together with the Tweet: “#Bahrain I can confirm one shotgun injury now in #Manama.”

In a letter to Bahrain’s attorney general, Human Rights Watch explains that the security forces used force to disperse a group of about 30 demonstrators at around 9:15 p.m. on 14 December in the Manama district of Al-Makharqa, in the course of which a demonstrator sustained a gunshot injury to the leg.

Shortly afterwards, a photo of the injured leg was posted on several online forums. The same photo was posted on Bahrain Online on 17 December with the caption “picture of the injury of one of the youth in Manama with shot gun.”

Al-Muhafda posted the photo on his Twitter account on 14 December. It was posted again on his account on 17 December, while he was attending a demonstration at which the security forces did not open fire.

Reporters Without Borders calls on the judicial authorities to change the charges against Al-Muhafda and, in particular, to drop the claim that he acted with the deliberate aim of inciting violence. The purpose of these charges is to severely punish his commitment to the free flow of information about human rights in Bahrain.

Humaidan, 25, who has received 143 international awards for his photography, has been held since his arrest on 29 December after a month of continual harassment by the security forces.

Around 15 plain-clothes police officers took him by force to a detention centre where, handcuffed and blindfolded, he was interrogated for two days and then placed in solitary confinement for the next five days. His family was not able to visit him until 6 January, when he said he had been subjected to psychological torture and death threats. …source

January 28, 2013   No Comments

Saudi backed brutality punishes Villages as Opportunists push Opposition back to Hamad’s poisonous “dialogue”

Saudi-backed forces, mourners clash in Bahrain
27 January, 2013 – PressTV

Heavy clashes have reportedly erupted between anti-regime protesters and Saudi-backed security forces in the Bahraini village of Daih.

Protesters clashed with security forces, as they were moving towards Manama’s Pearl Square, also known as Martyr Square, the birthplace of the popular uprising that began two years ago.

Security forces fired tear gas and gunshots to break up the rally, which was also held to commemorate Qasim Habib Ja’far, an eight-year old boy who lost his life after inhaling tear gas fired by the Al Khalifa regime forces a few days ago.

Over the past months, a number of Bahrainis, including children, have died due to the inhalation of poisonous tear gas fired by Bahraini forces.

Last year, Amnesty International warned about the Bahraini regime’s misuse of tear gas against protesters and called for an investigation into the tear gas-related deaths.

Bahrainis have been staging demonstrations since mid-February 2011, demanding political reform and a constitutional monarchy, a demand that later changed to an outright call for the ouster of the ruling Al Khalifa family following its brutal crackdown on popular protests.

The Manama regime has arrested many rights activists, doctors and nurses since the uprising began.

Bahrainis say they will continue anti-regime demonstrations until their demand for the establishment of a democratically-elected government and an end to rights violations is met. …source

January 28, 2013   No Comments

Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi declares emergency after his forces murder dozens in streets

Egypt’s leader declares emergency after clashes kill 49
27 January, 2013 – By Edmund Blair, Yasmine Saleh – Reuters

CAIRO: Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi declared a month-long state of emergency on Sunday in three cities along the Suez Canal which have been the focus of anti-government violence that has killed dozens of people over the past four days.

Seven people were shot dead and hundreds were injured in Port Said on Sunday during the funerals of 33 protesters killed at the weekend. A total of 49 people have been killed in demonstrations around the country since Thursday and Mursi’s opponents have called for more protests on Monday.

“Down, down Mursi, down down the regime that killed and tortured us!” people in Port Said chanted as the coffins of those killed on Saturday were carried through the streets.

In a televised address, Mursi said a nightly curfew would be introduced in Port Said, Ismailia and Suez, starting Monday evening. He also called for dialogue with top politicians. About 200 people protested in Ismailia after the announcement.

“The protection of the nation is the responsibility of everyone. We will confront any threat to its security with force and firmness within the remit of the law,” the president said, adding that he offered condolences to families of the victims of those who died in the cities.

In Cairo the newly appointed interior minister Mohamed Ibrahim was ejected from the funeral of one of the police officers who died during Saturday’s clashes in Port Said, according to witnesses and police sources.

A police officer at the funeral said many of his colleagues blame the interior minister on the deaths of at least two policemen during Saturday’s clashes as he did not allow the police there to carry weapons and were only given teargas bombs.

State television said seven people died from gunshot wounds on Sunday. Port Said’s head of hospitals, Abdel Rahman Farag, told Reuters more than 400 people had suffered from teargas inhalation, while 38 were wounded by gunshots.

Gunshots had killed many of the 33 who died on Saturday when residents went on the rampage after a court sentenced 21 people, mostly from the Mediterranean port, to death for their role in deadly soccer violence at a stadium there last year.
…more

January 28, 2013   No Comments

Calls for Independent Investigation into Police Murder of Eight-Year-Old in Bahrain

ADHRB Calls for Independent Investigation into Death of Eight-Year-Old Boy Following Tear Gas Attack
28 January, 2013 – ADHRB

Americans for Democracy and Human Rights in Bahrain (ADHRB) strongly condemns the death of an eight-year-old boy from Karbabad village in Bahrain on Saturday, and calls for an independent investigation into his death. Qassim Habib died after experiencing respiratory problems believed to have been triggered by exposure to the heavy use of tear gas in his village on January 17.

“Qassim’s death is another example of the indiscriminate use of tear gas against civilians by the Government of Bahrain,” said ADHRB Director Husain Abdulla. “The pervasive use of tear gas as a weapon by Bahrain’s police force has resulted in injury to dozens of protesters and innocent bystanders, and death to at least 30 more. This violence needs to stop, not today, not tomorrow, but yesterday.”

The use of tear gas by the Government of Bahrain has been documented by various human rights organizations. A report published in August 2012 by Physicians for Human Rights, for instance, chronicled the “relentless and indiscriminate” use of toxic chemical agents (i.e., tear gas) against Bahraini citizens, resulting in the “maiming, blinding, and even killing of civilian protesters.” According to the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, the “extensive use of tear gas” is the number-one cause of death by authorities in Bahrain, contributing to 31 percent of all such deaths.

ADHRB calls on the Government of Bahrain to stop all attacks on civilians and to discontinue the use of tear gas until a full and independent investigation into tear gas-related injuries and deaths in Bahrain can be completed. ADHRB also calls on the government to hold officers accountable for using tear gas in an excessive or improper manner. The international community must also pressure the Government of Bahrain to put a permanent end to such attacks. Finally, ADHRB asks that the suppliers of tear gas cease the distribution of such articles to the Government of Bahrain until an independent investigation into allegations of the misuse of crowd control devices can be conducted. …source

January 28, 2013   No Comments

Bahrain: Human Rights Defender, “twitter criminal”, Al-Muhafdha back to Bahrain Court of Injustice tomorrow

Bahrain: Defender Al-Muhafdha going back to court tomorrow, leading human rights defenders remain in jail
28 January, 2013 – ABNA.co

Bahrain: Defender Al-Muhafdha going back to court tomorrow, leading human rights defenders remain in jail
(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) – The Gulf Centre for Human Rights (GCHR) and the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights (BCHR) welcome the release of human rights defender Said Yousif Al-Muhafdhah, the Acting Vice President and Head of Documentation Unit of BCHR by an order from a Bahraini court on 17 January 2013. In the meantime, we express concern that the defender may face prison sentence if convicted as he goes back to court tomorrow to stand for a trial.

Al-Muhafdha was arrested on 17 December 2012 while monitoring a protest in Manama and documenting police attack on peaceful protesters. He was charged for allegedly “spreading false news over twitter” in a reference to a tweet in which he exposed the human rights violations conducted by authorities in Bahrain. Al-Muhafdha was detained in isolation from the other prisoners of conscious until 17 January 2013, when the Lower Criminal Court decided to release him on bail of 100 Bahraini dinars, pending his trial which was postponed to 29 January 2013.

The Bahraini authorities continue to hold in custody leading human rights defenders, including the founder of the BCHR and GCHR Abdulhadi Al-Khawaja, who serves life in prison, detained since 9 April 2011, severely tortured in detention as he explained to the court, and had his military sentence upheld by Court of cassation this month in a disregard to the findings and recommendations of the Bahraini commission of inquiry regarding the prisoners of conscience. Also, leading human rights defender and president of BCHR, Nabeel Rajab is serving a 2 years prison sentence since 9 July 2012 for exercising his right to freedom of expression and assembly as envisaged in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Rajab is being held in isolation from the prisoners of conscious, sharing a cell at Jaw central prison with 2 none Arabic speaking criminals.

The release of Al-Muhafhda comes one week after a statement by the OHCHR in which they called for his immediate release. The GCHR and BCHR urge the OHCHR to take more actions to ensure the release of the other imprisoned human rights defenders in Bahrain.

Al-Muhafdha will be going back to court at a time in which the government of Bahrain has called for a political dialogue. The GCHR and BCHR call on the government of Bahrain to prove their seriousness in relation to the proposed dialogue by taking some real actions to show their respect to the human rights movement in Bahrain such as the following steps:

1. Immediately release detained human rights defenders Abdulhadi Al-Khawaja and Nabeel Rajab, and drop all charges against them. The GCHR and BCHR believe that these measures have been taken against them to hinder their legitimate and peaceful work in defense of human rights.

2. Drop all charges against Said Yousif Al-Muhafdha and put an end to the targeting of human rights defenders in Bahrain.

2. Guarantee in all circumstances that all human rights defenders in Bahrain are able to carry out their legitimate human rights activities without fear of reprisals, and are free of all restrictions including judicial harassment.

3. abide by the provisions of the UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders, adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on December 9, 1998, in particular its Article 1, which provides that “everyone has the right, individually and in association with others, to promote and to strive for the protection and realisation of human rights and fundamental freedoms at the national and international levels”, as well as Article 12(1) that provides “everyone has the right, individually and in association with others, to participate in peaceful activities against violations of human rights and fundamental freedoms”, and Article 12(2) (“the State shall take all necessary measures to ensure the protection by the competent authorities of everyone, individually or in association with others, against any violence, threats, retaliation, de facto or de jure adverse discrimination, pressure or any other arbitrary action as a consequence of his or her legitimate exercise of the rights referred to in the present Declaration.”)
…source

January 28, 2013   No Comments

Collective Manslaughter exacts toll on Children and Elderly in Bahrain

Bahrain: An 8 year-old-boy and an 87 year-old man; Two Victims in One Month of the Tear Gas Collective Punishment
27 January, 2013 – Bahrain Center for Human Rights

This YouTube video reportedly documents the amount of teargas which was thrown on the house of the victim. …more

January 28, 2013   No Comments

Appeal to UN to ban punishments by the Saudi Regime against expatriate workers

An Appeal to United Nations to ban punishments by the Saudi Regime against expatriate workers
28 January, 2013 – By Zulkifli Nazim – Asia Times

Many expatriates from various countries who are employed in Saudi Arabia are subject to severe hardships, misfortune and afflictions because of the prevailing laws of that country.

The Saudi Government is at liberty to implement its Company Laws and recruiting and employment systems etc., but when it comes to the question of enforcement of Criminal Procedure Codes, it must be emphasized that the countries which have sent these workers, under the protection of their governments, should take precedence over Saudi Laws.

Citizens of other countries cannot be victims of such barbaric laws of the Saudi Regime. These laws are nothing but 8th Century Arab tribal customs which have been infused with the word “Shari’ah” to make it sound legitimate and religious.

Islam or whatever the religion, has nothing to do with these barbaric customs of the despotic Saudis. These barbaric laws were designed by the Saudi Regime to meet the barbaric, savage and wild demeanour and deportment of the people of their own country and it has nothing to do with those who are being employed by and in that country.

It is imperative, therefore, that every country that sends their people to work in that country must, first, ratify an extradition treaty with that country especially in respect of those employed in Saudi Arabia; and any serious crimes by those employed must be subject to this treaty for extradition of the individual to the country of origin of the worker to be tried according to the laws of that country.

The whole world is aware of the hundreds of Saudi Citizens who have committed crimes in foreign lands being extradited and/or repatriated to Saudi Arabia.

Saudi Arabia cannot meet the desperate demands of the necessary workforce for their sustainability and economy and hence they “import” people to do their ”dirty” work for their own benefit. My question is “Why should these skilled, sem-skilled and unskilled people with various disciplines and vocations, advertised and sanctioned by the Saudi Regime, and who have actually gone there to fill the absolutely essential vacancies, demands and needs of various occupations in Saudi Arabia, which the majority of the Saudis are incapable of, be subject to any form of Saudi Laws of barbarism?”

This arrogance of the Saudi Regime had gone on unabated and unquestioned for too long a time. Don’t you think that it is high time that the representatives bent on achieving justice to all nations – vis-à-vis – The United Nations and all their members, step in at global level and every individual government of every country take action at national level, enforce the most urgent and essential action to eradicate this menace and threat to the expatriate workers in Saudi Arabia? …source

January 28, 2013   No Comments

Would you call Hamad friend or kill him with drones, if he murdered your babies, President Obama

January 27, 2013   No Comments

What now Hamad, another investigation, more lies, another police show trial?

January 27, 2013   No Comments

No Dialogue with Killers!

January 27, 2013   No Comments

Murderous Regime in Bahrain takes life of 8 yrs old Qassim Marzooq, in systematic gassing of homes by police

January 27, 2013   No Comments

Blac Block Marches Egypt

Egyptian Anarchist Movement Emerges with Wave of Firebombings and Street Fight
24 January, 2013 – Info Shop – Ryan Harvey – Even If Your Voice Shakes

Anarchists have been present in Egypt before, during, and after the revolution, but until today, they have yet to organize a mass grouping under the banner of anarchism. The Ultras of Egypt’s football clubs have for years been associated with anarchist ideas and actions, and they are widely credited with having initiated the level militancy that brought down the Mubarak government in February of 2011.

Last night, anarchism left the graffitied walls, small conversations, and online forums of Egypt, and came to life in Cairo, declaring itself a new force in the ongoing social revolution sparked two years ago with multiple firebombings against Muslim Brotherhood offices. Later, the government shutdown the “Black Blocairo” and “Egyptian Black Bloc” Facebook pages, but they were soon re-launched.

“Wait for our next attacks as we respond to the closing of our official page…” they posted in a statement posted online this morning (translated below).

Today, the black bloc made its first mass-appearance in Tahrir Square, and, shortly after, firebombed the Shura Council (Egyptian Parliament), tore down a section of the protest-barrier walls leading from Tahrir Square, and, with others, engaged in fighting against security forces.

These statements and actions are in preparation for tomorrow’s second anniversary of the revolution, and for what some are calling “a whole new level” or protest in Egypt.

Anarchism and the black bloc concept has grown in recent months across Egypt, Stemming from various anarchist grouping/circles that coalesced during the revolutionary period. A massive distrust among the youth of all political parties, a sharp critique of the role of religion within governance, and the inspiration of anarchist resistance around the world (largely symbolized by the late-2008 revolt in Greece) have helped it catalyze. …more

January 24, 2013   No Comments

Subcomandante Marcos: “Them and Us: The (lack of) Reason among those from Above.”

Chiapas: release of new communique by the EZLN hours before the arrival or Enrique Peña Nieto to lands under its influence
20 January, 2013 – SIPAZ

On 20 January, there was published the first part of a new message signed by Subcomandante Marcos entitled “Them and Us: The (lack of) Reason among those from Above.” The communique is written as a parody, from the perspective of those who speak “from above.” It asserts among other things that “We are those who command. We are the most powerful, although we be few in number. It does not matter to us what you do-think-hear-or say, just as long as you are deaf, mute, and stationary. We can impose a government onto somewhat intelligent people (although these are difficult to find in the political class), but we select one who cannot even pretend to know what is going on. Why? Because we can […]. We can use the police and the military apparatus to persecute and incarcerate various criminals, but these criminals are a vital part of our operations. In exchange we can choose to persecute you, beat you, arrest you, torture you, imprison you, and kill you.”

The powerful are said to affirm that “what truly is a danger, a veritable chaos, is when whoever makes herself into a collective, ground, band, race, or organization, and then come to learn how to say ‘yes’ and ‘no,’ and that these come to agreement among themselves. Because this ‘no’ has to do with those like us who command. And this ‘yes’… Well, this is a calamity; imagine that each person construct her own destiny, deciding what she will be and do. This would be like claiming that we are superfluous–that we are the ones who are left over, the ones who are not necessary, the ones who should be incarcerated, the ones who should disappear.”

It should be mentioned that the communique was released a few hours before the arrival of President Enrique Peña Nieto to Chiapas to present the National Crusade against Hunger in the Las Margaritas municipality. This crusade has as its budget close to 4 billion pesos, and it seeks to be deployed in some 400 municipalities with the highest indexes of social marginalization. Notably, Las Margaritas is one of the poorest municipalities in the country; it is considered to be a Zapatista bastion, being one of the cities that were taken peacefully by the EZLN on 21 December 2012. …more

January 24, 2013   No Comments