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Arabia
Uneasy calm after Bahrain crackdown
2011-03-18
Sure is quiet out there.
Yeah. Too quiet...

[Arab News] MANAMA/ALKHOBAR: In an early morning raid on Wednesday, Bahraini security forces cleared hundreds of anti-government protesters camping in makeshift tents for the last three weeks at the famous Pearl Roundabout in the heart of the Bahraini capital.

A Bahraini government source told Arab News that the cleanup operation began at 5:30 a.m. and was over by 9:50 a.m.

"We had given the squatters adequate warning and ample time to vacate the area," he said. "As our forces started clearing their way to the roundabout, they faced a number of obstacles and ambushes. They were fired upon, resulting in the death of two soldiers."

Doctors and journalists reporting from the scene said three protesters died and scores injured in the operations around the roundabout.

Television footage showed burning canisters and thick black clouds billowing from the area, partially obscuring the famous landmark.

"During the evacuation operation, the forces came across many barricades set up by the squatters in order to hinder the troop advancement," the government source said.

The protesters, he said, had set fire to everything they came across. They torched the makeshift plastic tents by throwing Molotov cocktails on them.

The government spokesperson said another group of forces encircled the nearby Salmaniya Medical Complex and removed the ambulances parked at the entrance to block the soldiers from approaching the area. He said the troops were asked to use tear gas and not to use live ammunition. "The whole operation was successful and was over in a matter of few hours," he said.

King of the Arabians, Sheikh of the Burning Sands, Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah received a telephone call from US President Barack B.O. Obama on Wednesday. The two leaders discussed major regional and international developments including the situation in Bahrain, the Saudi Press Agency said.

Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal and his counterparts in Bahrain and the UAE held talks with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on the Gulf situation.

Members of Bahraini opposition groups told Arab News that heavy force was used against "unarmed and peaceful" protesters.

"We kept shouting, peace, peace, but they would not listen to us. They charged at us menacingly ... we held our ground for long and then started running helter-skelter," said a middle-aged protester who only identified himself as Abu Ali.

A leading member of the opposition denounced the assault as a declaration of war on his community. "This is war of annihilation. This does not happen even in wars and this is not acceptable," Abdel Jalil Khalil, the head of Al-Wefaq's 18-member Parliament bloc, told Rooters. "I saw them fire live rounds, in front of my own eyes."

The reaction from business-friendly pro-government supporters was one of relief. "Thank God, the roundabout has finally been cleared," said Dalia Marzouki. "We were like hostages in our own country. These people had started blackmailing everybody. I support my government, there has to be law and order."

The country's large expatriate community, especially Paks and Bangladeshis, has also taken a harsh line against the protesters. One particular reason for this is the killing and stabbing of members of these communities in the last two days. One journalist said bodies of two Bangladeshi workers were recovered from Sitra village on Tuesday night. They had stab wounds indicating that an armed mob had set upon them. Three days earlier, a Pak expatriate was dragged from his car and brutally killed.

Iraq's Prime Minister Nuri Al-Maliki criticized military intervention in Bahrain, and followers of holy man Moqtada Sadr erupted into the streets of Storied Baghdad.

Iran, meanwhile, withdrew its ambassador from Bahrain "in protest at the killing of the people of Bahrain by its government," a statement posted on the government website dolat.ir said.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
... sometimes described as the Smartest Woman in the World and at other times as Mrs. Bill, never as Another William H. Seward ...
criticized the deployment of Gulf troops in Bahrain.
Posted by:Fred

#5  (as president)
Posted by: Pollyandrew   2011-03-18 17:04  

#4  I met Secretary Clinton in person, and her presence and charisma as well as extemporaneous speech abilities deinitely trumps TOTUS. You actually got the sense she had a brain an a law degree, more than I can say for Bambi.
Posted by: Fi   2011-03-18 17:03  

#3  Strange New Respect-wise-speaking:

I would have paid to see the international fit Hill might have thrown if cornered.

Neo-neo-con that I am, I always felt that she has more innate brass than 0 could purchase on the open market.

It would have been glorious to see her truly pissed-off.
Posted by: Pollyandrew   2011-03-18 16:58  

#2  With all the stress and trauma of dealing with Obama, being snickered at by other foreign leaders and being rejected by the various democracy groups in the world, I'm guessing Hillary is pounding down several boxes of Kraft Mac-and-Cheese comfort food every night.
Posted by: Steve White   2011-03-18 09:00  

#1  That is NOT a recent photo. Most recent I saw (couple of days ago) her face had porked out quite a bit... big face, small mouth.
Posted by: tipover   2011-03-18 01:55  

00:00