Fwd: [bangla-vision] Bahrain Revolution - Saudi Arabia playing with fire, warns Islamic Republic of Iran
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From:
Labbayk YaMahdi <labbayk_yamahdi@yahoo.ca> Date: Thu, Mar 31, 2011 at 7:04 PM
Subject: [bangla-vision] Bahrain Revolution - Saudi Arabia playing with fire, warns Islamic Republic of Iran
To: Al Mahdi Unite Muslims <
mahdiunite@yahoogroups.com>
Cc:
somalishia@yahoogroups.com Double Standards of West, UN Security Councils, UNCHR and Arab League!
Fall Falling Fallen
Iran: Bahrain invaders playing with fire The Iranian Parliament (Majlis) The National Security and Foreign Policy Commission of the Iranian Parliament (Majlis) has warned against Saudi Arabia's invasion of Bahrain, calling on Riyadh to leave the Persian Gulf state. "Saudi Arabia knows better than any other country that playing with fire in the sensitive Middle East region will not be in their interests," said the commission in a Thursday statement regarding the ongoing developments in the region. "Instead of pursuing US policies in the region, Saudi Arabia had better think about its own interests and the Muslim world and take steps to pull out its forces from Bahrain in order to establish peace and security in the region and refrain from adding to complications," it added. Bahrain steps up arrests of Shia activists - opposition
Bahrain has stepped up arrests of cyber activists and Shi'ites, with more than 300 detained and dozens missing since it launched a crackdown on pro-democracy protests, the opposition said Thursday. | (Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - Earlier this month, the Persian Gulf Arab island's Sunni rulers imposed martial law and called in troops from fellow Sunni-ruled neighbours, including Saudi Arabia, to quell the protest movement led mostly by the state's Shi'ite majority. The severity of the crackdown, in which public gatherings are banned and security forces have been deployed at checkpoints, stunned Bahrain's Shi'ites and angered the region's non-Arab Shi'ite power Iran.
Tragic video: Washing of Bahraini Young Martyr 'Sayyed Ahmad Saeed Shams', March 31
Fifteen-year-old Sayed Ahmed martyred from a faceshot in the village of Saar on Wednesday, Bahrain's Al Wefaq political party announced.
| (Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - Security forces in Bahrain have reportedly killed a male teenager yesterday March 30, amid continuing crackdown on the popular revolution around the country. Fifteen-year-old Sayed Ahmed martyred from a faceshot in the village of Saar on Wednesday, Bahrain's Al Wefaq political party announced. At least 25 people have been martyred and about 1,000 others injured during the government-sanctioned violence.
2011/03/31 | Wahabi Terrorists Shot Martyred Shia Cleric in Karachi
A Shia cleric Maulana Ali Paienda was gunned down on Wednesday in Future colony Landhi Karachi, by the terrorists of Wahabi-Nasabi organization of Sipah-e-Sahaba, Laskhar-e-jhangvi and Taliban backed by Saudi-American regimes. 2011/03/31 |
Bahraini forces target patients: HRW Salmaniya Medical Complex in the Bahraini capital, Manama The Human Rights Watch (HRW) has announced that Bahraini forces are hunting down patients who have been injured by rubber bullets, tear gas and live ammunition during anti-government protests. "There is absolutely no justification for arresting someone solely because the person might have been wounded in a protest-related incident," Middle East Deputy Director at HRW Joe Stork said in a statement on Wednesday. "It is against every tenet of humanity to deprive patients of critical and sometimes life-saving medical treatment, causing them grave suffering and perhaps irreparable harm," he noted.
Saudi Arabia attacks Bahrain Holy Sites Islam Times – A video was recently released showing Saudi Arabian forces attacking Bahrain holy sites. | | Islam Times reports that a video was released which shows a number of Saudi Arabian and Bahraini forces destroying the dome which was over the grave of Shaykh Jamri.
This film shows the soldiers tearing the dome down from above Shaykh Jamri's grave and throwing it into the streets.
Other reports have come in which state that Saudi Arabian forces have attacked Shia Husayniyah's. Watch the film by clicking here
Bahrain steps up crackdown Anti-government protesters flee after riot police fire rounds of tear gas to disperse them in the village of Diraz, west of Manama. Bahrain is expanding the crackdown on the opposition as security forces open fire on anti-government protesters in the capital Manama and several other towns nearby. On Wednesday, Bahraini troops, backed by Saudi forces, attacked protesters in Diraz, Sanabis, Nuwaidrat and Belad al-Qadeem, UPI quoted witnesses as saying. Security forces have also managed to disperse the protesters in Manama. Witnesses say a 15-year-old boy was killed in the village of Saar. Bahrain's main opposition bloc, the Al-Wefaq National Islamic Society, said on Tuesday that 250 people have been detained and 44 others gone missing since martial-type laws were introduced two weeks ago to contain the anti-government protests in the Persian Gulf state. Meanwhile, the Human Rights Watch (HRW) said that government forces are targeting patients shot with rubber bullets, tear gas and live ammunition during anti-government protests and are denying them crucial medical care.
Bahraini forces destroy Shia mausoleum Pearl Square in Bahraini capital Manama Amid the growing crackdown in Bahrain, forces backed by Saudi Arabian troops have destroyed the mausoleum of prominent Shia leader Abdul Hamid al-Jamri. The forces took away the dome of the mausoleum on Thursday. Bahraini forces had earlier pulled down the monument on the Pearl Square in the capital city of Manama. The Pearl Square was the focal point of anti-government protests over the past weeks since it served as a symbol of resistance against the Bahraini regime.
Teenager killed by Bahraini forces A woman cries during the funeral for a victim of the government-sanctioned crackdown in the village of Karranah on the outskirts of the Bahraini capital, Manama on March 18, 2011. Security forces in Bahrain have reportedly killed a male teenager amid continuing crackdown on the popular revolution around the country. Fifteen-year-old Sayed Ahmed died from a headshot in the village of Saar on Wednesday, Bahrain's Al Wefaq political party announced on its page on the social networking website Facebook. The party said the victim was out playing and tried to run when he saw the forces.
American Peace Activists demand an end to violence against Bahrain Demonstrators Islam Times - Anti-war demonstrators and peace activists marched the streets of downtown Minneapolis and across the US this weekend to express their solidarity with the freedom fighters in Bahrain that have been violently toppled by Saudi and Bahraini military forces over the past month... | | Islam Times: The Obama administration once again finds itself in a bind as pro-democracy demonstrators in Bahrain face off against an authoritarian ally in the oil rich Gulf region. Secretary of State Hilary Clinton this week reinforced the US's relationship with its long time friend and ally Bahrain, while also expressing her "deep concern about the actions of the security forces [Saudi and Bahraini] there."
Since the start of Bahrain's uprising mid-February, tens of thousands of men and women have gathered at the capitol of Manama peacefully demanding their right to freedom and democracy. Nonviolent protesters were immediately suppressed by thousands of Saudi troops who were ordered in by the Saudi dominated Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) in Bahrain, the same group which is part of the Arab league who also approved the no-fly zone in Libya.
'Bahrain revolution will not stop' Leader of Bahrain Freedom Movement Abdul Rauf Shayeb says anti-government protesters will keep up with the rallies until their demands are met. "We are not going to stop this revolution no matter, what they (the government) are going to use against us," Shayeb told Press TV.
Kuwait's Government resigns Islam Times – Kuwaiti sources stated that the government will resign today. | | Islam Times reports that the newspaper Al-Watan, published in America, quoted Kuwaiti sources who said that the Kuwaiti government will resign today after it meets with Sheikh Ahmad al-Sabah, the Emir of Kuwait.
Sources on the streets state that this is just a method that the government is using to hide its shortcomings. The government is doing this in order to escape responsibility. It seems as if Nasir Muhammad al-Sabah, the Kuwaiti prime minister, did not have any other choice other than resigning due to current conditions of Kuwait and the pressure that the parliament members were putting on him.
There have been serious differences between the government and the parliament. The government has been forced to resign on many occasions. But the present conditions, along with the uprisings that are taking place in other Arab countries, might make this political fight dangerous in Kuwait.
© Islam Times
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