Bahrain
meets 2013 with intensified crackdown on protesters
Bahrain
meets 2013 with intensified crackdown on protesters
RT,
3
January, 2013
Bahrain
has rung in 2013 with newly invigorated popular unrest, as Shiite
protesters took to the streets demanding a new transitional
government to replace that of Prime Minister Khalifa, who has ruled
the tiny Gulf state for almost 40 years.
The
violence follows similar clashes earlier in the week when one man
suffered a severe head injury when the government used force against
protesters in the capital, Manama. Tear gas was deployed by the
Saudi-backed state's law enforcement to disperse the protesters, who
demanded freedom for all jailed activists. On Monday, several
protests were detained across the island nation. The Shiite
opposition in the tiny Sunni-ruled kingdom, which is home to the US
Navy's fifth fleet, wants a government of technocrats to rule during
a transition that would lead to a constitutional monarchy.
But
the clampdown on the opposition is intensifying, according to Asma
Darwish of the European-Bahraini Organisation for Human Rights.
“Yesterday
was just the beginning of the year, and we could see the excessive
use of violence and no actual intention of the authorities to enhance
the situation or to have a real political reform on the ground in
Bahrain,” Darwish told RT.
“Security
forces are using a lot of violence and are violating many human
rights during the confrontations with pro-democracy protesters.”
Since
the uprising began in February 2011, at least 80 people have been
killed and thousands arrested. A report published by the Bahrain
Independent Commission of Inquiry in November 2011 found that
political activists, politicians and protesters had been tortured. It
also rejected government claims that the uprising was instigated by
Iran.
A
followup unit sent in June 2012 to monitor Bahrain's progress in
implementing the report’s recommendations found that human rights
activists were still being arrested and harassed #- and at increasing
rates. “The promise of meaningful reform has been betrayed by the
government’s unwillingness to implement key recommendations around
accountability,” the group reported, adding that the situation in
Bahrain has “markedly deteriorated” and the country “risks
sliding into protracted unrest and instability.”
Last
month the government banned rallies and stripped 31 opposition
members of their nationality for what it said were security reasons.
Since December, the Financial Times reports that one village was
raided by police more than 300 times, with some houses plundered
several times a day.
Such
scenes are becoming an everyday reality for locals, Darwish says,
adding that in the village of Sitra, where she lives, “tear gas was
excessively used by security forces” as they “ran down the
streets and randomly terrorized the houses either by shooting at them
with guns or by manually throwing tear gas canisters into the
houses.”
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