Bahrain Riot Police Clear Protesters With Tear Gas
Topics: From the Wires, News
A Bahraini anti-government protester holds a banner with jailed opposition leaders' images, demanding their freedom Friday Dec. 30, 2011, during a protest near Abu Saiba, Bahrain, along a highway that runs past several Shiite Muslim villages. The sign reads: "The symbols and imprisoned activists." Thousands of Bahrainis are marching near the capital city of Manama to demand the immediate resignation of the government. The mostly Shiite Muslim protesters carried the red and white Bahraini flag as they marched in a northern district of the tiny island kingdom for nearly four miles (six kilometers). (AP Photo/Hasan Jamali)(Credit: AP)MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — Riot police in Bahrain fired tear gas Friday to disperse several hundred protesters among thousands who took to the streets Friday to demand the government’s resignation after a fact-finding report uncovered torture and other abuses against detainees.
The protesters carried the red and white Bahraini flag as they marched for nearly four miles (six kilometers) along a highway running through Shiite neighborhoods in a northern district of the island kingdom. After the march, several hundred protesters gathered at a traffic circle, prompting police to seal off the road and clear the crowds with clouds of tear gas.
Bahrain’s Shiites, about 70 percent of the nation’s 525,000 citizens, complain of widespread discrimination under the kingdom’s Sunni rulers, including being blocked from top government or military posts. The monarchy has offered some concessions but refused to bow to demands for greater political freedoms and rights.
Activists accuse the government of failing to implement the recommendations of a fact-finding mission it authorized. The mission’s 500-page report, released in late November, found a number of detainees were tortured as “a deliberate practice by some” during the height of the protests in February and March.
“No change has happened,” said Fatima Ahmad, a 24-year-old protester. “All the officers and people who were involved in the violation of human rights were awarded different posts and positions. The government is fooling its own nation and that is why it must resign.”
The report on the crackdown was also highly critical of a special security court created under martial law that issued harsh penalties, including death sentences, and “denied most defendants elementary fair trial guarantees.”
Bahrain later lifted martial law and dissolved the security court.
The report urged Bahrain to review all the security court verdicts and drop charges against those accused of nonviolent acts such as joining or supporting the protests.




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