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Five bomb blasts hit Bahraini capital, two killed

Five bomb blasts hit Bahraini capital, two killed thumbnail

Five bombs exploded in the heart of the Bahraini capital Manama on Monday, killing two Asian street cleaners, officials said, and prompting mutual accusations from activists and a government trying to put down a mostly Shi’ite pro-democracy uprising.

The Interior Ministry said the bombs were homemade and described the blasts as “terrorist acts” – its term for violence by opposition activists.

But an opposition politician and a rights activist said the attacks, which came days after the government said it had banned all rallies and opposition gatherings to ensure public safety, could have been the work of government forces trying to justify the ban or a further crackdown.

Injuries to protesters or police are relatively common in the 21-month-old uprising, but attacks on the public have been rare on the Gulf island, where the Sunni Muslim Al Khalifa dynasty rules over a majority Shi’ite population.

The explosions took place between 4:30 and 9:30 a.m. (0130-0630 GMT) in the Qudaibiya and Adliya districts of Manama, the official Bahrain News Agency (BNA) said, citing a police official. It described the explosives as “locally made bombs” and said a third Asian worker had been wounded.

One of the attacks took place outside a cinema, where one of the street cleaners died when he kicked a package that blew up. A witness said that blast caused little material damage, suggesting it had not been large.

ATTACKS ON POLICE

Police say they have been the target of numerous attacks with homemade bombs since April, including one that killed a policeman last month, as the government has stepped up efforts to quell an uprising that has crippled the economy.

The United States condemned the attack and called for all sides to enter into a dialogue without pre-conditions to resolve the tension.

“We remain deeply concerned about the rise of tensions in Bahrain… all of this just undercuts the process of national reconciliation that we have strongly been urging on Bahrainis of all stripes for many, many months,” State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said in Washington.

Opposition politician Matar Matar of the Shi’ite party Wefaq said he doubted that opposition activists were behind Monday’s attacks, noting that leading Shi’ite clerics had called on followers to avoid escalating the conflict with the government.

He suggested the police or military might have been responsible, or a rogue unit.

“This incident is strange – why would anyone target workers?” he said. “I’m worried that police and military are losing control of their units or it is (preparation) before declaring martial law.”

Maryam al-Khawaja, acting head of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, said: “As always, we condemn violence but, given the Bahraini authorities’ background in spreading disinformation, we call for an independent investigation into the deaths of the two migrant workers.”

Khawaja, who is based in Denmark, said the attacks were “not grounds to start a campaign of collective punishment, arbitrary arrests, and torture, as we’ve see happen before”.

Amnesty International called for an independent investigation into the attacks. “…those responsible (must be) brought to justice in proceedings that comply with internationally recognised standards for fair trial and with no possibility of the death penalty,” a statement said.

REGIONAL RIVALRY

Shi’ites complain of discrimination in the electoral system, jobs, housing and education, and say they are mistreated by government departments, the police and the army. Government promises of action to address their concerns have come to nothing, they say. The authorities deny this.

Washington has urged Bahrain to begin dialogue on democratic reforms with the opposition. But its criticism has been offset by its support for a country that plays a key role in U.S. efforts to challenge Iranian influence in the region and hosts the U.S. Fifth Fleet, which patrols oil-shipping lanes.

Bahrain has become caught up in regional rivalry between Sunni states such as Saudi Arabia – which helped Bahrain to crush mass protests last year – and Shi’ite power Iran, which champions the cause of Bahrain’s Shi’ite opposition but denies accusations of fomenting the unrest.

Thirty-five people were killed in Bahrain during protests in February and March 2011 and the two months of martial law that followed. While mass protests in central Manama have been stamped out, there are still clashes between protesters and riot police almost every day in Shi’ite districts.

Activists and rights groups say nearly 50 civilians have been killed in the turmoil since the end of martial law, while the authorities say two policemen have died.

Reuters



3 Comments on "Five bomb blasts hit Bahraini capital, two killed"

  1. Arthur on Tue, 6th Nov 2012 9:25 am 

    “Shi’ites complain of discrimination in the electoral system, jobs, housing and education, and say they are mistreated by government departments, the police and the army.”

    Shi’its in Kuwait know that the country is surrounded now by Shi’ite entities Iran and Iraq and begin to try their luck at the issue of ‘liberation’. Wonder when similar uprisings will begin in Saudi-Arabia. The unintended consequences of the 2003 US invasion of Iraq are now coming to the surface. A Sunni bulwark was destroyed, making way for the rise of Shi’ite power. Maybe these jews behind Clean Break/PNAC were not as smart as they like to think they are. Again, the only significance of the Middle East in the modern world is oil. Most of the oil happens to be situated in Shi’ite inhabited territory. Thanks to Pearl, Wolfowitz and the rest of the neocons with names from a Tel Aviv phonebook, the oil will be situated in Shi’ite *governed* territory as well. What we are witnessing is the rise of a Shi’ite empire, without Teheran having to lift a finger. There is not going to be a New American Century, in fact it remains to be seen if the zionists can keep their grip on America like they did since 1913. The Czar in Russia was deposed in 1917 because he had lost the war against Germany. The happy marriage between the Jews and Anglos was based on the rise of America, thanks to succesful strategizing and meddling into European affairs in WW1 and WW2, which resulted in the destruction of the European empires and the rise of the West (American empire). Now zionist-lead America is stumbling from one blunder into the next. To start with there is 9/11, hanging as the sword of Damocles over Netanyahoo, Olmert, Zakheim, Silverstein, and a few others, who pulled this stunt off, backed by the media and the entire political system after the fact. If all the oil of the ME is going to be under the control of a new Shi’ite empire and the flow of oil to the west is no longer secured, it remains to be seen how long the current American power structure will remain in place.

  2. BillT on Tue, 6th Nov 2012 9:35 am 

    Arthur, I agree with your take on the situation.

    Israel is whipping a very sick dog (US) that has not fallen over dead, yet. We have to borrow ALL of the money to pay and equip our legions, from our future enemies.

    The rest of the world, outside of the poverty stricken West, is moving away from the Petro Dollar as a means of exchange. It is only a matter of time until NATO falls apart, along with the Euro and eventually, the EU.

  3. Arthur on Tue, 6th Nov 2012 12:17 pm 

    The German most prominent weekly Der Spiegel always backed the US as the loyal satraps that they were. But yesterday they published this, written by their editor in chief Jakob Augstein:

    http://www.spiegel.de/politik/ausland/us-wahl-wie-der-kapitalismus-das-land-zerstoert-a-865278.html

    They are predicting the demise of the US empire. The many comments (including mine) were on average one of surprise that der Spiegel had said this as it sounds like a policy change, which it probably is and could initiate the geopolitical earthquake of the 21st century, namely the breakup of the West and Germany and France (Europe?) turning towards the East. Russia has raw materials as well as demand for German products, where southern Europe only has needs. There are already many pipelines from Russia to Europe (Germany) and many new ones are planned (Southstream as well as new gaspipelines under the Baltic sea). French nationalists under Marine le Pen already announced they will turn to Russia once they are in power and leave NATO. And if Germany and France will switch sides, nothing will remain from the Atlantic alliance except maybe Britain (certainly), Holland and Poland.

    google “France to ditch NATO, embrace Russia if National Front comes to power”

    I think that at the end of the liberal economic age, after resource depletion starts to bite, the EU is going to be replaced by a ‘Europe of the Fatherlands’ in the spirit of Charles de Gaulle, with even less economic and financial solidarity than there is now (only 1% of Europe’s GDP flows through coffers in Brussels today).

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