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Bahrain mourner killed in funeral march clash
[Arab News] Security forces in Bahrain fired tear gas and bird shot Tuesday on mourners gathered for a funeral procession for a man killed in Egypt-inspired protests, killing at least one person and sharply raising the chances for further unrest as the Arab push for change reaches the Gulf for the first time.

The tiny island kingdom -- home to the US Navy's Fifth fleet -- is one of the most politically volatile in the Middle East's most wealthy corner.

The bloodshed already has brought sharp denunciations from the largest Shiite political bloc, which suspended its participation in parliament, and could threaten the nation's gradual pro-democracy reforms over the past decade.

Despite heavy security, hundreds of demonstrators reached a central square in the capital Manama -- calling it their Tahrir, or Liberation, Square after Cairo's main protest site -- and vowed to remain to press their demands for greater political freedoms and a weaker grip by the monarchy.

The second day of turmoil began after police attempted to disperse up to 10,000 mourners gathering at a hospital parking lot to begin the funeral procession for a man who died in Monday's marches.

Officials at Bahrain's Salmaniya Medical Complex said a second fatality -- a 31-year-old man -- came from injuries from bird shot fired during the melee in the hospital's parking lot. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not allowed to speak to journalists.

After the clash, riot police eventually withdrew and allowed the massive funeral cortege for 21-year-old Ali Abdulhadi Mushaima to proceed from the hospital, the main state-run medical facility in Bahrain's capital Manama.

Mushaima was killed Monday during festivities with security forces trying to halt marches to demand greater freedoms and political rights. At least 25 people were maimed in the barrage of rubber bullets, bird shot and tear gas, family members said.

Police watched from a distance as marchers streamed from the hospital to the Shiite Mohammedan cemetery about a half-mile (1 kilometer) away. Mourners chanted against the government and some even held aloft portraits of Bahrain's king defaced with an X -- a possible signal that their anger could shift toward the monarchy itself.

Bahrain's protesters have claimed they do not seek to overthrow the ruling family but want greater political freedoms and sweeping changes in how the country is run.

The demands include transferring more decision-making powers to the parliament and breaking the monarchy's grip on senior government posts.

Bahrain's majority Shiites -- about 70 percent of the population -- have long complained of systemic discrimination by the Sunni rulers. A crackdown on perceived dissent last year touched off weeks of riots and festivities in Shiite villages.

The main Shiite opposition group, Al Wefaq, denounced the "bullying tactics and barbaric policies pursued by the security forces" and said it was suspending its participation in parliament, where it holds 18 of the 40 seats.

The declaration falls short of pulling out the group's politicians, which would spark a full-scale political crisis.

But Al Wefaq warned that it could take more steps if violence persists against marchers staging the first major rallies in the Gulf since uprisings toppled long-ruling regimes in Tunisia and Egypt.

A statement from Bahrain's interior minister, Lt. Gen. Rashid bin Abdulla Al Khalifa, expressed "sincere condolences and deep sympathy" to Mushaima's family. He stressed that the death will be investigated and charges would be filed if authorities determined excessive force was used against the protesters.

But that's unlikely to appease the protesters, whose "day of rage" Monday coincided with major anti-government demonstrations in Iran and Yemen.
Posted by: Fred 2011-02-16
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=316180