…from beneath the crooked bough, witness 230 years of brutal tyranny by the al Khalifas come to an end
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Beautiful Dreams and Hope

January 18, 2012   No Comments

NPR incredibly Sanitary interview with Chief Officer Malarkey

Timoney Discusses New Job Training Bahraini Police
18 January, 2012 – Robert Siegel – NPR

Robert Siegel talks to John Timoney, senior vice president for business development and senior consultant for police and security matters for Andrews International, a consulting firm with offices throughout the U.S. and the world. He has been recruited by Bahrain for police training. Timoney is a former Miami and Philadelphia police chief, who won accolades for fighting crime and curbing police shootings of civilians. But his handling of street demonstrations during the Free Trade Area of the Americas summit in 2003 brought lawsuits from the American Civil Liberties Union over the same issues of excessive force and unlawful arrests.

…listen to NPR Story HERE

January 18, 2012   No Comments

Bahrain a review of the current uprising

January 18, 2012   No Comments

New Window Dressing – King Hamad’s 40+ Year Charade of Human Rights and Democratic Reform

Bahrain Opposition Says King’s Measures Fall Short
By NADA BAKRI – 15 January, 2012 – NYT

BEIRUT, Lebanon — Bahrain’s king on Sunday announced constitutional amendments that will give the elected Parliament greater powers of scrutiny over the government, but the concessions fell short of the opposition’s demands for change.

The move by King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa came nearly a year after long-simmering dissent in Bahrain, an important American ally in the Persian Gulf, erupted against the monarchy. A sweeping crackdown that polarized the country managed to end most of the protests, though the riot police and demonstrators still clash almost daily.

In a nationally televised address, King Hamad said that the new measures had emerged from the national dialogue that he organized last year to try, at least symbolically, to bridge the gulf between the government and the opposition. The amendments will give Parliament the right to approve cabinets proposed by the Sunni Muslim monarchy and will grant legislators authority to question and remove cabinet ministers.

Since 1971, the cabinet in Bahrain has been led by the king’s uncle, Prince Khalifa bin Sulman al-Khalifa, the world’s longest-serving unelected prime minister and a figure deeply resented by the opposition. Under the new amendments, opposition leaders said, Parliament would still not have the power to question or dismiss the prime minister himself. A consultative council appointed by the king also limits the power of legislators.

“Our people have proven their desire for continuing with reforms,” the king said during his speech. “We complete the march today with those who have an honest patriotic desire for more progress and reform.

“I must mention here that democracy is not just constitutional and legislative rules; it is a culture and practice and adhering by the law and respecting international human rights principles,” the king said.

The king’s speech follows the release of a report by a panel of respected international jurists in November. Led by M. Cherif Bassiouni, an Egyptian-American law professor, the panel recommended sweeping changes, which the government has said it will pursue.

The opposition praised parts of the report, but it has dismissed the government’s response, saying that it has not addressed the deeper political imbalance in a country divided, in the simplest terms, between the Sunni monarchy and a Shiite Muslim majority.

Opposition leaders had a similar response on Sunday, saying that the king’s amendments did not reflect their demands for establishing a full constitutional monarchy.

“His speech fell short of our expectations,” said Sayyid Hadi Hasan al-Mosawi, a former legislator and a member of Wefaq, the largest legal opposition group. Speaking by telephone from Bahrain’s capital, Manama, he said, “The measures did not reflect any of the opposition or the people’s demands.”

Wefaq withdrew from the national dialogue, which started last July, because it said the process did not go far enough in offering far-reaching changes.

“The speech did not even tackle the core of the problem,” Mr. Mosawi said.

In a statement, Wefaq said the speech was full of “insignificant trivia” and “far from the demands of the Bahraini people who have taken to the streets for months to demand democratic transformation and to reject the dictatorship.” …source

January 18, 2012   No Comments

Security Forces engage in a round of thuggery

January 18, 2012   No Comments

Wide Spread Protest Manama and Beyond, 18 January

January 18, 2012   No Comments

Security Forces graduate from “roving thugs”, to “formation thugs” under Timoney

January 18, 2012   No Comments

Security Forces attack villages while major protest underway in Manama

…Sayed Mohamed Story Blog – Great Coverage of Protest HERE

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Bahrain Protest 18 January – Police Violence against protesters begins

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“An old March” from years past following same route as Manama march today

January 18, 2012   No Comments

Bahrain: Activists defy ban on downtown protest

Bahrain: Activists defy ban on downtown protest
(AP) – 39 minutes ago

MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — Witnesses say Bahraini riot police have chased anti-government protesters out of the center of the island kingdom’s capital.

The scuffles Wednesday came a day after authorities denied the country’s main Shiite-backed opposition party, Al Wefaq, permission to hold protests in central Manama.

Witnesses say hundreds of protesters were scattered throughout the old city and diplomatic area, and police used stun grenades to disperse some of them.

Bahrain’s majority Shiites have been the driving force behind widespread protests inspired by the Arab Spring uprisings over the past year.

Wednesday’s protests erupted a day before Bahrain hosts an air show that runs through Saturday. …source

January 18, 2012   No Comments

Bahrain Protests 18 January Video Report

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Bahrain Security Forces Stand-off another Protest before attack – 18 January

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Bahrain Security Forces Pause before Shooting and Gassing Protesters – 18 January

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Bahrain Protests 18 January, 2012

…more coverage and images HERE on Storyful

January 18, 2012   No Comments