Sunday 15 July 2012

Civil unrest in Qatif, Saudi Arabia


Saudi Security Forces Hurt By Gunmen In Oil-Rich Province
Four Saudi security personnel were injured in an attack by masked gunmen while on patrol in Awwamiya in the oil-rich Eastern Province, the Saudi Press Agency reported, citing an Interior Ministry spokesman



14 July, 2012

Gunmen also fired at the police station in the village and threw a Molotov cocktail while riding motorcycles, the Riyadh- based news service said today, citing Major General Mansour al- Turki. One of the assailants was killed in the attack on the station and three others escaped, it said.

While Sunni-majority Saudi Arabia largely avoided the unrest that spread across the Arab world last year, minority Shiite protesters have clashed with security forces in Awwamiya, al-Qatif and other eastern towns. In February, Saudi Arabia accused “a number of elements” of trying to provoke violence by firing on security forces in Awwamiya.

A new cycle of Shiite protests against the Saudi regime and its policing tactics is developing in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia,” Crispin Hawes, director for the Middle East and North Africa at Eurasia Group in London, wrote in an e- mailed note yesterday. “The immediate implications for state stability and crude oil production are limited, but the repercussions for the stability of the province in the longer- term are potentially significant.”

Oil pipelines run near the village to Ras Tanura, the country’s largest refinery, about 20 kilometers (12 miles) away. Awwamiya is close to the al-Qatif oil field, which produces as much as 500,000 barrels a day. Saudi Arabia is the world’s biggest oil exporter.

Cleric Arrested

The attacks came about five days after Saudi security forces arrested dissident Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr in Awwamiya earlier this month, the Saudi Press Agency reported on July 8. Two Shiite men were killed after his arrest though there were no security confrontations, the Interior Ministry said said in a statement sent by mobile-phone text message on July 9.

Videos posted on Youtube and Al-Jazeera showed demonstrators in the streets al-Qatif and Awwamiya after the arrest of al-Nimr. The authenticity of the videos couldn’t be verified by Bloomberg News. The Interior Ministry said a “limited number of people have assembled” in Awwamiya.

The current demonstrations are more severe and appear to be more coordinated than previous incidents,” Hawes said.

The U.S. State Department noted in a human-rights report on Saudi Arabia published in 2009 that Shiites in the kingdom face “significant political, economic, legal, social and religious discrimination condoned by the government.”

Behind Riots

U.S. citizens living in or considering travel to al-Qatif and Awwamiya should exercise caution and be aware of the potential for protests that can result in violence, the American Embassy in Riyadh said in an e-mailed statement July 9. There is a potential for further demonstrations, the embassy said.

Awwamiya, a village north of al-Qatif on the Persian Gulf, was the scene of much larger demonstrations in 2009 after police sought to arrest al-Nimr, who had said in a sermon that Saudi Shiites may be able to seek a state of their own in the future. Al-Nimr has been one of the people behind riots in Awwamiya, the Interior Ministry said after his arrest.Saudi Arabia has accused Shiite-led Iran of interfering in the affairs of Arab countries in the Persian Gulf, home to three-fifths of the world’s oil reserves. Iran denies this and accuses Sunni rulers in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia of discriminating against Shiites.

Qatif protests metamorphose into organised attacks on security forces
Masked gunmen attack police station in Al-Awamiya; two security forces patrols come under gunfire in town of Saihat.

Middle East Online,
14 July, 2012



A gunman was killed during an attack on a police station as four Saudi policemen were wounded in a separate assault on their patrols in the kingdom's Shiite-populated east, state media reported.



"Four masked gunmen on motorbikes entered Al-Awamiya police centre where one of them threw a petrol bomb while the rest opened fire at the station," interior ministry spokesman Mansur al-Turki said, quoted by SPA news agency.



"The guards dealt with them, killing one while the rest (of the assailants) fled," said Turki.



The attack in the Shiite town of Al-Awamiya took place on Friday evening, less than a week after two protesters were killed in clashes with police in Qatif district following the arrest of a prominent Shiite cleric.



In those clashes, on Sunday night, activists said dozens of protesters were wounded when police fired on a demonstration against the arrest of Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr whom the authorities have described as "instigator of sedition."



Turki said the security forces would not tolerate "rioters, especially those who are armed," and would hold responsible anyone who does not help in handing them over or offers them refuge.



In a separate statement on SPA, the spokesman announced that "two security forces' patrols came under gunfire from masked armed men on motorbikes in the town of Saihat, wounding four members of the security forces."



Qatif district, where both towns are located, has witnessed several protests initially triggered in February 2011 after an outbreak of violence between Shiite pilgrims and religious police in the holy city of Medina.



The protests escalated after the kingdom led a force of Gulf troops into neighbouring Bahrain to help crush a month-long Shiite-led uprising last year against that country's Sunni monarchy.



Saudi Arabia's estimated two million Shiites, who frequently complain of marginalisation, live mostly in the east, where the vast majority of the OPEC kingpin's huge oil reserves lie.




I would suggest referring back to this report earlier in the year about the insurrection in the eastern provinces of Saudi Arabia, HERE

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