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Feb-27-2011 20:10printcomments

Bahrain Bleeds for Liberty

-"No Sunni, no Shiite, we are Bahraini!"

Salem-News.com
Courtesy: Press TV

(LONDON) - Just before the Arab revolt erupted across the region there was much talk about how minorities in the Middle East we being mistreated. Of course such concerns were not unfounded, but many vocal critics never really cared for finding real solutions nor did they give much attention to the plight of minorities elsewhere around the world. In fact, they often were the very same people who encouraged abusing minorities in Europe and the US.

Minorities in the Arab world (and elsewhere) continued to suffer. However, what has really been missed was that the majorities in most Arab countries felt they were discriminated against more than anyone else. The signs were always there but few bothered to report it till the uprisings that swept the region left no room for doubt.

In Bahrain, a persecuted majority has literally been bleeding for equality and now, after days of anti-regime protests, dare dream of democracy. Unfortunately, many mainstream media outlets and so called analysts have failed to report the protests in Bahrain as a people's struggle for democracy and equal rights.

Instead, they sought to stress the sectarian divides of the country, even though the protesters were calling for Sunni-Shiite unity against dictatorship. Analysts were also too preoccupied with the implications a democratic Bahrain would have on Saudi Arabia (negative) and on Iran (positive) – as if it is OK to deny Bahrainis their basic human rights just because that might not sit well regionally.

The role of the US in all of this is, of course, also crucial. The Fifth Fleet, a major US Navy base, has been in Bahrain for 63 years. As seven Bahrainis were killed following police crackdown on protesters, the US praised the monarchy for taking "positive steps" to reach out to demonstrators. During a visit to Bahrain, the top US military officer Admiral Mike Mullen reaffirmed Washington's support for King Hamad's "handling (of) the popular crisis" and "strong commitment" to Bahrain's army.

Mullen said his visit to the Gulf was aimed at "reaffirming, reassuring and also trying to understand where the leaderships of these countries are going, and in particular in Bahrain."

Despite US calls for "restraint", I do not see the people of Bahrain being reassured.

Some analysts fear that a democratic Bahrain would give Iran more influence in the region. This is ironic since many of those who claim to want total democracy for Iran do not wish that same privilege for the people of Bahrain, Palestine, Lebanon and Iraq (and elsewhere) precisely because they think that would benefit Iran. But why would a free and democratic Bahrain threaten anyone's 'legitimate' interests? Freedom and equality in Bahrain serve first and foremost the people of Bahrain. The majority of the people of Bahrain are the legitimate voice of Bahrain; they cannot – by default – betray Bahrain. Nor do they wish any trouble in the region.

Saudi Arabia urged Bahraini's opposition "to be reasonable in proposing their ideas, and accept what was offered by the government." This is the same Saudi Arabia that said it rejects foreign intervention in Bahrain's affairs and pledged its backing to the regime in Manama.

Stranger than fiction Order Now

But which of the opposition demands or slogans by protesters at Pear Square run against the interest of the people of Saudi Arabia (or any people for that matter)? None. Read some of them for yourself:

-"No Sunni, no Shiite, we are Bahraini!"

-"We are brothers, Sunnis and Shiites. We shall not abandon this country."

-"Did you hear anybody raising a sectarian demand, or a demand for one part of the people of Bahrain?"

-"The time has come for true unity."

-"We want a real consitutional monarchy"

-"We want an elected government."

-"We want the people to write their constitution themselves through an elected council."

-"The people should choose their government." -"We want a parliamentary, democratic regime -- a regime with a free parliament elected by the free will of the people, and this parliament will form a government." -"People here are demanding democracy, and fair distribution of wealth, and these demands are for all the people."

Mamoon Alabbasi is an Iraqi news editor and translator based in London who writes compelling articles from a unique perspective. His Op-eds, reports, and reviews have appeared in a number of media outlets and we are very pleased to carry his work at Salem-News.com.

Mamoon has a Masters degree in applied linguistics. The many interesting highlights of his career include spending ten years in Tunisia teaching English. He has also published a number of poems online. Salem-News believes in utilizing the work of poets; this is an outstanding way to present news and current information, and always a great tool of expression regardless of the subject. You can send Mamoon an email at this address: abbasid@writeme.com




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Riwan Khan March 3, 2011 1:12 am (Pacific time)

This pro democratic poem is for all of those who want democratic Bahrain.


Poem: Suppression, I accept not – by Bhuwan Thapaliya

I came into this world
not like the river but like a drop of water
and will soon evaporate

Though, I am only a drop of water in the majestic ocean of nature
I yearn to create a vigorous ripple of freedom, in the eternity of the water

For I am a man of eternal freedom,
and suppression I accept not …
I will not accept it

The living God within me urges me to be free, and to
march on the road of freedom sans any dread

My heart, like Einstein, thinks in another dimension
unknown and unknowable …
even to my own mind

And like Goethe, looks at things in a different manner,
different than those thinkers
bestowed with pristine minds

Freedom, the gift of God, is the inherent right
of every individual
in this compressed world

I will fight till the end to free the masses
from the grip of suppression
and ignite the lamp of freedom

I will free the masses or die in the attempt
but I will never live to see
the naked dance of repression

I am not afraid of those suppressors,
nor am I afraid of the death
that they are planning for me;
they can kill me but not freedom forever

My blood boils whenever I see the strong ones
pulverising the lean, and my heart cries
whenever I see the starving pauper
in the abattoir of the prosperous butcher

For me
a red rose is a red rose
it is not white just because they call it white
to disguise the ignorant

They can conquer Everest but not my spirit
they can stagnate the river
but not my impetus

They can take my sight away
but not my vision of freedom

They can cut my tongue into pieces
but not my voice of freedom

They can stab me with the dagger of despotism
but not impede the blood of freedom

I know the road to freedom is blocked with obstacles
but obstacles cause no despair
if they are encountered with hope

We must act now and not merely just look away
when our freedom
is threatened from within

Because it is better to perish without freedom
than to have a yearn for freedom
but not the valour to harvest it

Don’t be a coward …

Be prepared to receive bullets to your chest
because, in the struggle of freedom, tolerance
of suppression is an offence

Stand up … stand up

Gather your courage. Come out
into the field; let’s march hand in
hand together, right beneath the
nose of the suppressors, for the
emancipation of our freedom

Let us not forget that …

The ocean is composed of drops
of water, and all drops possess
equal potentials, but only, when
they mix with other drops do
they form a powerful bond

So …

Listen, my oppressed brothers
listen, my trodden sisters
listen … listen
to the natural desire
of your ceaseless soul

Do not fear
trust your soul
and march ahead
with a resolute heart
for the better tomorrow

And scatter
the seeds of freedom,
where does it go?
it does not matter
scatter it more with hope

Welcome the freedom
welcome it today
and enjoy it evermore
but do not use your freedom
to suppress the people’s soul
to suppress the people’s soul

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