Tag: middleeast

  • Bahrain Shia Sunni Violence Simmers To Erupt

    The Persian Gulf Country Bahrain is simmering because  of Social, economic and religious tension.

    “Bahrain human rights activist Maryam Al-Khawaja says the government there is escalating its crackdown on protests in advance of a major opposition rally, and says that the regime continues to torture detainees. Al-Khawaja, President of The Bahrain Center For Human Rights, appeared on HuffPost Live Wednesday to discuss the Bahraini government‘s ban on protests as well as the cases of a photojournalist and blogger who were arrested and abused by police with host Ahmed Shihab-Eldin.

    2011-2-17 Sourcehttp://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/12/witness-to-an-uprising-what-i-saw-in-bahrain/249977/
    Barhrain Police Attack Protesters..

    King Hamad’s royal decree last week banned protests in the country’s capital, Manama, and heightened “punishments” for those citizens who do not abide by the decree. The decree comes just two weeks before a major opposition rally planned for August 14, the celebration of Bahrain’s independence from the United Kingdom. While the Bahraini government has framed the decree as an amendment to the 2006 Law on the Protection of Society from Acts of Terrorism, the United Nations has expressed concern over what exactly this entails. In addition to the revocation of citizenship for anyone found guilty of terrorism and an increased detention period, it also bans sit-ins, rallies, and gatherings in the capital.

    Al-Khawaja told HuffPost Live that the decree merely legalizes practices that have been in place for years, and the government has begun increasing its crackdown on protestors in recent weeks.”

    The development is not new.

    As usual, this is the legacy of the British.

    Just as they messed up Palestine and  jinxed the Palestinian issue, by  complicating the local affairs for their perceived benefits and leaving the Sate as things became too hot,they installed a family to rule in Bahrain and the result is for every one to see to-day.

    For their own commercial interests in Oil, US and the West are keeping a studied silence waiting for a suitable opportunity to install another Puppet.

    In the meanwhile, people suffer.

    One wold have noticed that the world media is also very coy about reporting the Bahrain riots.

    Story:

    Bahrain News — The Protests Chronology

    1. AUG. 2, 2013

      Bahrain’s King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa issues new decrees giving authorities more powers to quell antigovernment protests; measures are part of crackdown unveiled in response to uprising by members of Bahrain’s Shiite majority, who are demanding greater political voice.MORE »

    2. MAY. 16, 2013

      Bahraini court jails six people for a year for insulting King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa in messages on Twitter.MORE »

    3. APR. 25, 2013

      United Nations expert Juan E Mendez says Bahraini government has effectively cancelled his scheduled visit to country, during which he was to investigate reports that authorities abused and tortured protesters in detention.MORE »

    4. MAR. 29, 2013

      Court in Bahrain clears 21 medics of charges linked to antigovernment protests in 2011; arrests of dozens of medical workers were part of crackdown by Bahrain’s Sunni rulers after uprising began in 2011 by majority Shiites seeking greater political voice.MORE »

    5. MAR. 15, 2013

      Dozens of people are injured in Bahrain as protesters clash with riot police on second anniversary of Saudi-led military intervention in country.MORE »

    Source:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Background_of_the_Bahraini_uprising_(2011%E2%80%93present)

    http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/bahrain/index.html

    Bahrain Uprising background  :

    The Al Khalifas have ruled Bahrain since 1783 after expelling the Persians. In 1868, Bahrain was captured and dominated by the British. The country was a protectorate “guided” by the British, despite having the Al Khalifas as rulers. In 1923, the British replaced Sheikh Issa bin Ali with his son. Three years later the British placed the country under the de facto rule of Charles Belgravewho operated as an adviser to the ruler until 1957. Having no legal code, the country’s judiciary was run by Belgrave giving him the ability to control any opposition movement.[3]

    The National Union Committee was equally composed of Sunnis and Shias.

    In the 1950s sectarian clashes occurred when a group of Sunnis including members of the royal family, among them the ruler’s brother, attacked a Shia religious ritual and a neighborhood. Although many thought it was a “deliberate provocation to create sectarian divisions”, the violence lasted for two years. In 1954, the National Union Committee (NUC) was set up by middle-class Sunnis and Shias. They said Belgrave was “helping foment religious hatred and imprisoning innocent people” and demanded his removal as well as installing a democratic system and a code of law.[3] The NUC is regarded by Bahraini scholar Abdulhadi Khalaf as the “earliest serious and still enduring challenge to ethnic politics in Bahrain”.[4] The committee lasted for two years until the British crushed the uprising, imprisoning and deporting its leaders.[3]

    In 1965 a month-long uprising broke after hundreds of workers at Bahrain Petroleum Company were laid off. Several general strikes were staged, however the movement was crushed again by the British. In 1966, the British persuaded Bahrain to appoint another “adviser”, this time a Colonel calledIan Henderson. The purpose, according to secret British documents was “to give Henderson a free hand to reorganise it [the “Special Branch”] into an efficient, modern covert surveillance ‘anti terrorist’ organisation”. Henderson was then known for his alleged role in ordering torture and assassinations during Kenya‘s Mau Mau Uprising. Henderson freed all those imprisoned in the 1965 uprising and allowed protest-related militants to return. This move was analyzed later as “building up an intricate system of infiltrators and double agents inside the protest movement”.[3]

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Background_of_the_Bahraini_uprising_(2011%E2%80%93present)

  • Top Killer For Syrian Rebels 11 Year Boy!

    Strange is the world of Middle East.

     

    An area always in turmoil with a  host of problems facing some nation or another, it is now the turn of Syria to fight Assad.

     

    As Assad hardens his stand , so are the rebels .

     

    What is bizarre is that their killing machine is a 11 year old boy,Mohammed Afar called as Little Lion.

    Mohamed Afar Killer Syria.
    Mohamed Afar Killer Syria.

    Read On.

    Over the top of his faded yellow jacket a Free Syrian Army vest holds three extra clips, each full with live ammunition, and a walkie-talkie. An FSA badge sits on one side and a rendering of the Islamic Shahada, in Arabic calligraphy, on the other.

    He says he does not miss school or want to stay at home with his mother and two sisters.

    “I want to stay as a fighter until Bashar is killed,” he says, referring to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

    The fighters surrounding him, all claiming to be from Liwa al-Tawhid, pass him a sniper rifle and offer to take him to a frontline, so he can demonstrate his shooting.

    “He is a great shot,” says his father, Mohammed Saleh Afar. “He is my little lion.”

    Over the course of its grinding 21-month insurgency, Syria’s children have endured numerous abuses.

    Caught-up in shelling, airstrikes, and sniping, they have additionally been subject to arbitrary arrest, torture and rape, as reported by the United Nations Commission of Inquiry on Syria in August; which, additionally, noted “with concern reports that children under 18 are fighting and performing auxiliary roles for anti-Government armed groups.”

    Both the Geneva Conventions and the U.N. Convention on the Rights of Children carry provisions that call for not using combatants under the age of 15, while the International Criminal Court’s Rome Statute makes it a war crime.

    Mohammed quickly disengages his magazine and presents it, before skillfully reinserting it, but not chambering a round. The older fighters surrounding him— some of whom are little more than boys themselves —praise his speed and mirror his father’s earlier statements, calling him a “good shot.”

    He says he admires the fighters from Jabhat al-Nusra—composed of hardline Islamists subscribing to Takfiri ideology—and recently designated a foreign terrorist organization by the United States. Al-Nusra have proven effective in battle, winning itself scores of supporters.

    http://www.vice.com/en_au/read/the-little-lion–syrias-11-year-old-killing-machine

     

     

  • CIA’s Unapproved Action,Libya.

    C(aught)I(n the)A(ct) as usual and with out sanction.

    This morning the LATimes published the following:

    “In addition, current and former American officials say that CIA operatives and equipment were sent into rebel-held areas to monitor the opposition forces’ activity even before the air bombardment began. It’s not clear whether those operatives are still in Libya, and if so, what their current role is.” (latimes.com/news/politics/la-fg-libya-rebels-20110324,0,3195209.story)

    Now this article popped up.

    I don’t like coincidences with the CIA. We’ll see what develops.
    Has anyone else heard anything about the CIA in Libya lately?

    What exactly was a CIA-linked jet doing landing in Tripoli as the UN Security Council met to approve military action? Exchanges with air traffic control recorded by amateur radio hams show a plane with registration N799WW was cleared for landing at Mitiga International Airport 11km east of Tripoli on the evening of 17 March.

    The Bombardier BD-700 plane is registered to Wells Fargo Bank Northwest NA, a subsidiary of US superbank Wells Fargo & Company. What has set tongues wagging is that the same subsidiary is the trustee for a Raytheon Hawker aircraft with a tail number N168BF which was allegedly used for extraordinary rendition flights by the CIA.

    At 22:30 UTC this flight was airborne again from Mitiga and departed via Malta and Italy to an unknown destination, rumoured to be Luton.

    http://current.com/17jqp4c

    306622-mystery-flight-n799ww-landing-mitiga-libya-hllm

  • Africa, Middle-east Uprising.Lesson.Videos.

    Fundamental Islam ,Monarchs and Dictators have been messing atoud too long.

    People who have been under yoke now realize that they have been duped in the name of Religion by people to cling to power.

    Popular uprising is the result.

    Unfortunately the alternative is not bright as no body has built a viable option.

    We are in for uncertain times.

    MUSCAT — The Council of Ministers and the chief of Oman’s trade union federation called upon the people to protest peacefully and not to indulge in violent activities.

    While the council of ministers warned the people against unlawful protests, the chairman of the General Federation of Oman Trade Unions (GFOTU) said that protestors should stop behaving in an ‘uncivilised manner’ like indulging in vandalism, arson and destroying property.

    The anti-government protests, which began in February across the country, had turned violent in some places like Sohar, Ibri and Dhank where government and private properties were damaged and arson took place.

    The Council of Ministers’ statement said that the pioneering steps taken by His Majesty Sultan Qaboos bin Said to improve the standard of living of all citizens and provide jobs in many sectors, should be received in proper spirit by the people.

    The Council of Ministers, while warning that no one is above the law, stated that since the authorities are considering the demands of all the protestors, they should not act in a manner, which is against the laws and legislations of the country. Such acts are also not in harmony with the culture, progress and values of the Sultanate.

    http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticleNew.asp?col=&section=middleeast&xfile=data/middleeast/2011/March/middleeast_March286.xml

    Bahraini police blocked several thousand protesters from reaching the royal palace on Friday, amid fears the march would spark fighting on a Gulf island where the majority is Shi’ite Muslim but the ruling family is Sunni.

    http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/11/us-gulf-protests-bahrain-idUSTRE72A1U320110311

    Libya.

    Libyan leader Muammar Al Qathafi Wednesday intensified offensives in the east and the west with relentless shelling aimed at routing holdout rebels and retaking control of the country four weeks into an uprising that is threatening his government.

    Loyalist forces say they are closing in on the rebel held stronghold of Benghazi, with Libyan state TV reporting that two key tribes in the city have now thrown their support behind the Libyan leader.

    Reports on the ground suggest the rebels’ position looks highly vulnerable after the government said its troops took control of the junction at Ajdabiyah.

    http://www.tripolipost.com/articledetail.asp?c=1&i=5614

    Yemen.

    SANA’A, March 13 — The United States is concerned that there is no clear alternative or transition plan should Saleh’s regime collapse. It believes that his departure will lead to chaos and instability in Yemen.

    This view was conveyed by US ambassador to Yemen Gerald M. Feierstein, who reiterated his country’s position on Yemeni affairs in a meeting with selective media outlets on Saturday.

    “Our problem is that the [Yemeni] people are demanding [the ouster of Saleh] without any idea how they will manage the government and prevent a disaster for the Yemeni people,” said Feierstein.

    He said that his office has not received any concrete proposals by either the opposition parties or the pro-democracy youth protesters at Sana’a University explaining how the country will be managed during a transition period and how the new president will come to power.

    “The people in the streets need to give us something to work with,” said the ambassador.

    Meanwhile, one day after Feierstein’s meeting with the media, a coordination council established by youth protestors at Sana’a University issued a list of seven conditions that must be met if the demonstrations are to be brought to a close. These seven demands are also meant to serve as the basis for a national political program in a post-Saleh era.

    The first two conditions are the immediate removal of Saleh, his family, his close relatives and his subordinates from power, and the subsequent formation of a temporary presidential council made up of representatives drawn from Yemen’s four main political powers (as well as a fifth representative appointed by the national security and military establishment).

    http://www.yementimes.com/defaultdet.aspx?SUB_ID=35747

    Somalia.

    At least 35 people have been killed and dozens injured in heavy clashes and exchange of mortars fire in Somalia’s war-ravaged capital Mogadishu on Wednesday, witnesses told Garowe Online.

    Clashes between Somali government forces backed by African Union troops and Al-Shabaab extremist militias erupted after Al-Shabaab shelled mortars at the Somali Presidential house and its neighbourhood that claimed the life of ten civilians including a pregnant woman.

    AMISOM and government forces shelled back mortars at the busy Bakaro market that left dead 21 people, mostly women and children.

    http://www.garoweonline.com/artman2/publish/Somalia_27/Somalia_Dozens_die_others_injured_in_Mogadishu_clashes.shtml

  • Dubai Debt Troubles Push Down Stocks in U.S. and Asia

    A country which is a thinly veiled totalitarian State,to which world has turned a blind eye because of oil,a country where Human Rights violations can not even be voiced because of monetary clout,a place where people flocked to to work for a people who do not know what to do, a Head of the country who is not accountable to any one, where economic transactions are limited to family coterie, with generous doles to foreign corporations, where ordinary citizens have been led to believe building skyscrapers could lead to their happiness, has burst.
    Worst is yet to come.

    Story:
    Wall Street turned lower on Friday, as traders scrambled to play catch-up after downturns in Asian and European markets over the Thanksgiving holiday.

    Investors were spooked by reports that Dubai World, the emirate’s investment vehicle, was seeking to suspend repayments on all or part of its $59 billion in debt. That pushed shares down more than 3 percent on European markets on Thursday; Asia markets posted similar declines on Friday.

    Immediately after the markets opened, the Dow Jones industrial average fell about 230 points, but shares then started to regain ground. In the last 40 minutes of trading, the Dow was down 1.3 percent or 133 points. The broader Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index fell 1.5 percent or 16 points, and the technology-dominated Nasdaq slipped 1.3 percent or 28 points. The stock markets will close at 1 p.m. Friday after being closed Thursday for Thanksgiving. The bond markets close at 2 p.m.

    The dollar was just below $1.50 to the euro, and crude oil prices fell $3.08 to $74.88 in New York trading. Treasury prices rose.

    Analysts said they thought Thursday’s declines might be overdone, and that a true picture of the market’s reaction would emerge next week as buyers return from the holiday and as more details on the Dubai situation come out.

    “I don’t think it’s devastating at all,” said Jeffrey Saut, chief investment strategist at Raymond James. “Nobody knows the collateral damage, but it is clear that our banks have exposure to European banks.”

    A research note Friday from Credit Suisse estimated that European banks may be the hardest hit if Dubai World cannot meet its obligations, with total exposure estimated at 13 billion euros ($19.6 billion). European banks on Friday played down their exposure.

    “Dubai is really a symptom, a legacy, from the previous boom, rather than symptomatic of a start of a whole new set of issues that are going to create a systemic crisis in emerging markets,” Kevin Grice, senior international economist at Capital Economics in London, said. “Markets assume the worst-case scenario.”

    The uncertainty in Dubai did not suggest a coming collapse of the global real estate market, Mr. Grice said.

    European markets closed slightly higher. The FTSE 100 in London was up 52 points, or 1 percent, while the DAX in Frankfurt rose 71 points or 1.3 percent. In Paris, the CAC-40 increased 42 points or 1.2 percent.

    In Europe, investors were concerned about the state of public finances and possible credit rating downgrades in Greece and Ireland.

    Asian markets fell. The Hang Seng index in Hong Kong declined 4.8 percent and South Korea’s key market gauge, the Kospi, dropped 4.7 percent. The Nikkei 225 index in Japan and the Taiex in Taiwan both sagged 3.2 percent. The market turmoil was touched off by Wednesday’s announcement from Dubai, one of the seven members of the United Arab Emirates, that it was asking banks to allow Dubai World to suspend its debt repayments for six months.

    Dubai’s move — the global high-finance equivalent of a homeowner asking the bank to allow six months of skipped mortgage payments because of a shortage of cash — sowed fear of a contagion of instability that could roil markets that are only now recovering from the near cataclysm of the last year.

    “This has sent shockwaves through the markets, even though the problems in Dubai have been known about for two years,” Emil Wolter, a Hong Kong-based strategist the Royal Bank of Scotland, said by phone from Paris.

    “But it is not the trigger for a brand-new crisis. Yes, the magnitude of the situation is dramatic for Dubai. But Dubai is not America — and a property crisis in Dubai will not cause the same global crisis as a property crisis in the States.”

    Some market experts noted, for instance, that while banks that have lent money to Dubai World could suffer significant losses if the company were to default on all or part of its debt, worries about the sovereign debt of oil-rich Middle Eastern countries were unfounded.

    Paul Schulte, head of multi-strategy research at Nomura in Hong Kong, commented in a note on Friday: “Dubai was a carbon copy of Thailand’s disastrous foray as an ‘international financial center’ in the 1990s. Happily, the U.A.E. has oil. Thailand did not.”

    Like many Western consumers during the good times, Dubai gorged on debt and borrowed too much to finance a building boom that has gone bust in the downturn.

    “Dubai was fairly much the worst example of overextension. It had the worst debt per capita in the world by far,” Christopher Davidson, an expert in Gulf politics at Durham University in Britain, said Thursday. “I would like to put it down as a really enormous white elephant that doesn’t have much in common with the regular economy of a regular state.”

    When credit markets froze last year, Dubai, like Iceland, found itself overextended. But Dubai, which has little oil, was backed by its Arab emirate neighbors, especially oil-rich Abu Dhabi — or so investors had assumed.

    Saud Masud, head of research at UBS in Dubai, said Thursday that negotiators would feel pressure to reach some kind of deal to present to the markets before trading in the region resumes next week after the Eid holiday. The Dubai government’s total debt is estimated at about $80 billion, of which, Mr. Masud estimated, about two-thirds is held by local investors.

    Mr. Schulte of Nomura commented in his note that, in his view, “it is not a matter of when but at what price Abu Dhabi will bail out Dubai.”

    Mr. Wolter of RBS said he too believed Abu Dhabi would have no choice but to ultimately come to Dubai’s rescue. Until that becomes clear, though, he said, markets would remain extremely nervous.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/28/business/28markets.html?_r=1&hp&emc=na