Saturday, September 28, 2013

Thousands protest in Bahrain over opposition leader arrest




Published time: September 28, 2013 12:49



Anti-government protesters holding banners saying “Stop Dictatorship In Bahrain” as they participate in a rally called by Bahrain’s main opposition Al Wefaq in Budaiya, west of Manama, September 27, 2013 (Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed)





Large crowds of Bahrainis have protested west of the country’s capital, Manama, over the arrest of a prominent opposition figure, just hours after another rally ended with clashes with police.


The former deputy speaker of parliament, Khalil Marzooq, was arrested Sept. 17 on charges of “inciting and advocating terrorism.” 


Anti-government protesters holding anti-government banners participate in a rally called by Bahrain


On Friday, protesters hit the streets of Manama, waving Bahraini flags and chanting, “Revolution until victory,” and, “We will not forget the martyrs.”


image by @AlWefaqENThe rally was largely peaceful, but followed another protest in a nearby village that saw clashes between the police and protesters who tried to approach Pearl Square in Manama, considered to be the cradle of Bahrain’s revolution.


“Police were the target of a terrorist act of Molotov cocktails being thrown and partly setting on fire a vehicle of law enforcement officers in Shaharkhan village west of Manama,” AFP reported the Interior Ministry as saying.


Security forces fired teargas to disperse the demonstrators.


Protests started on Thursday night in Manama and nearby Shiite villages, with people demanding the release of political prisoners.


Marzooq is the secretary-general of Bahrain’s main opposition bloc, al-Wefaq. Marzooq was deputy speaker in Bahrain’s 40-member parliament before 18 al-Wefaq MPs walked out in February 2011 to protest violence against demonstrators.


The Gulf state is a predominantly Shiite country and has seen frequent unrest since authorities cracked down hard on the popular uprising against the ruling Sunni monarchy in 2011.


At least 80 people have been killed since the Bahrain protests erupted, according to the International Federation for Human Rights.


Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed


A Bahraini woman wearing a Guy Fawkes mask used by the Anonymous movement flashes the


General Secretary of Bahrain


A Bahraini girl holds up her national flag as she takes part in an anti-government protest in the village of Jannusan, west of the capital Manama, on September 27, 2013 (AFP Photo / Mohammed Al-Shaikh)


image by @AlWefaqEN





RT – News



Thousands protest in Bahrain over opposition leader arrest

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