http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the_sleeping_giants_of_tiny_bahrain_2011
0328/

 


The Sleeping Giants of Tiny Bahrain


By  <http://www.truthdig.com/juan_cole> Juan Cole

Truthdig: March 31, 2011

Risking the radicalization of Bahrain's Shiite community may be a very bad
idea. Worries on that score are what led
<http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i2k0XI6UcgoMVaWUG_RfqG9s
jalw?docId=CNG.82fce0d1e069b2865b114176f57c0264.291> Vice President Joe
Biden to ask again in a phone call Sunday to the king of the island nation
for a negotiated settlement between the Sunni monarchy and his repressed
Shiite majority. Meanwhile, as Iraqi Shiites demonstrated in favor of their
coreligionists in Bahrain, Iraqi Prime Minister
<http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jlXpaOIsr71EoP2gugUf1aas
W1Ew?docId=CNG.414d9a63a3c6d33db74e0e1648606e7d.141> Nouri al-Maliki warned
somewhat apocalyptically this weekend that Saudi intervention against
Bahrain's Shiites could ignite a "sectarian war" in the Persian Gulf region.

Bahrain's protest movement, inspired by events in Tunisia and Egypt, began
Feb. 14. The Bahraini crowds demanded the resignation of the prime minister,
whom they accused of ordering severe and persistent human rights abuses.
Khalifa Al Khalifa, the uncle of the king, has held the post since Bahrain
became independent of Britain in 1971. The largely Shiite protesters, led by
the Wifaq Party, also insisted that the constitution be altered to give more
power to the Shiite majority, and that the country become a constitutional
monarchy. Three small parties (including al-Haq, which had split from
Wifaq),
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/08/us-bahrain-republic-idUSTRE7273FG
20110308> began calling in early March for an outright republic, and of
course they frightened the Sunni monarchy and its Saudi backers most of all.

After a month of rallies and protests at the Pearl Roundabout in downtown
Manama, the beleaguered Bahraini monarchy brought in a thousand Saudi troops
to disperse the protesters on March 14. The action drew a sharp rebuke from
Iran, where Speaker of Parliament Ali Larijani warned that the Saudi
invasion would not pass without a reaction from Tehran. The next day,
emergency laws were imposed in Bahrain, including a ban on further large
public rallies and a curfew. Manama, the capital, has gradually returned to
a semblance of normality, but
<http://articles.latimes.com/2011/mar/25/world/la-fg-bahrain-protests-201103
26> Shiites in 12 small towns near the capital defied the state of emergency
to stage protests last Friday. They were met with a harsh reaction from
security police.

Among the Middle East protest movements, that in tiny Bahrain is one of the
more momentous. Manama hosts the headquarters of the U.S. 5th Fleet, which
provides security to a region that has nearly two-thirds of the world's
proven petroleum reserves. Bahrain has a citizen population of nearly
600,000 and about two-thirds of those are Shiite Muslims. The monarchy,
which is close to being an absolute monarchy, is Sunni and has traditionally
given the Shiites little respect. There are another 600,000 or so guest
workers in Bahrain, probably a majority of them Sunni Muslims from India and
Pakistan, though there are also substantial Hindu and Christian populations.
Expatriate Sunnis are employed as police and in the army and security
forces, and are sometimes given citizenship in a bid to offset the
demographic weight of the Shiites.

The current king, Sheikh Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, came to power as emir in
1999 and declared himself monarch in 2002. He promulgated a constitution
that created a toothless legislature. He appoints the 40 members of the
upper house, while the 40 seats in the lower house are filled on the basis
of elections. Electoral districts are gerrymandered, however, to prevent the
Shiites from gaining their rightful majority there. In the current lower
house, the Shiite Wifaq Party held 18 seats before its members resigned en
masse after the crackdown in early March. The lower house can be overruled
by the upper house, and the legislation of both can be struck down at will
by the king, so the Shiite majority remains effectively powerless.

Many of the
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/mar/03/bahrain-sunnis-shia-div
ided-society> discontents of Bahraini Shiites have to do with employment
discrimination. They maintain that they are underrepresented in government
jobs because of a regime preference for Sunnis. Many Shiites are from rural
villages, and they find it difficult to compete for private-sector jobs with
expatriate Sunnis, who often have skills and a knowledge of English that
give them an edge with corporations.  

Most Shiite clerics in Bahrain reject the Iranian doctrine that clerics
should rule, as a
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wikileaks-files/bahrain-wikileaks-cables/83
34568/THE-SHIA-CLERICAL-HIERARCHY-IN-BAHRAIN.html> 2008 State Department
cable released by WikiLeaks makes clear. Many look to Grand Ayatollah Ali
Sistani of Najaf in Iraq as an opinion leader. Only a small group is
oriented to Iran's Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei. Nevertheless, Sunnis often
unfairly depict Bahraini Shiites as a fifth column for Iran. 

Shiite moderation in Bahrain may well be threatened, however, by the
uncompromising attitude of the king and his prime minister. Their security
men have fired on protesters, killing altogether about 20 since the rallies
began and wounding more than 500. The Pearl Roundabout was forcibly cleared.
Wifaq alleges that more than 100 protest leaders have been arrested and are
being held incommunicado.  

Those who compare the crackdown in Bahrain to that in Libya are
exaggerating, since the loss of life in Libya has been hundreds of times
greater. Those who blame the United States for hypocrisy in demanding that
Moammar Gadhafi step down, and intervening militarily in favor of democracy
while coddling the Bahraini king, have a point. Fear that the lease of the
U.S. naval base will be summarily revoked if Washington pushes Manama too
hard probably plays a part in the Obama administration's timid statements on
the island's crisis. Likewise, fear of provoking sectarian conflict in the
nearby oil-rich Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia, which is traditionally
dominated by Shiites, and thereby sending oil prices spiraling still farther
upward probably adds to the caution. 

But Washington's tendency to handle the Bahraini monarchy with kid gloves
and to defer to the Saudis is ill serving the stability of the Persian Gulf.
Angry and hopeless Arab Shiite youths, deprived of political opportunities
and of a fair share of oil wealth in a generally affluent region, could turn
to Iran for succor if they think the U.S. and the West in general have
abandoned them. Bahrain is not a candidate for outside military
intervention, since it is not rolling tanks on crowds. But it is a candidate
for some tough love from the world community lest its unwise policies ignite
an armed struggle that could set back human rights and democracy in the
region and endanger the global economy. 

From: mwelsing [mwels...@socallib.org]
Sent: Wednesday, March 30, 2011 3:06 PM
To: Ed Pearl
Subject: Where you'll find great books: SCL's booksale


SCL Book Sale Update: 
MEMBER PREVIEW, Friday, April 1
BOOK SALE KICKOFF, Saturday, April 2


Attention SCL Members!

If you join <http://socallib.org/support/membership.html>  or renew as an
SCL member now now, you will be eligible to come to the Library for a
special member-only preview on Friday, April 1, a full day before everyone
else arrives on Saturday, the official start of the book sale. 

 

. You must be an up-to-date member to enter the preview.

. The preview will be held on Friday, April 1, from 1-7 p.m. 

. You will still be eligible to come back for the kickoff of the official
booksale on Saturday, April 2, from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Sign <http://socallib.org/support/membership.html>  up now to become a
member or renew your membership-anyone can join!

 

  _____  

 

And then don't forget to join us for the:


Booksale Kickoff
Saturday, April 2, 2011
10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Everyone welcome!

It's almost here:
SCL's Spring 2011 
Booksale


Photo of books

Wondering where to find a great book? 
Come to the Library's huge spring book sale!

 

 


Member Preview!
Friday, April 1
1 to 7 p.m.

Book Sale Kickoff
Saturday, April 2
10:30 am to 5 pm

 

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