BAHRAIN: THE PERSIAN Gulf island of Bahrain was in
shock last night after two days of an unrelenting military crackdown
against the civilian population. There were reports of widespread
violence by state security forces in conjunction with troops and
helicopters from the Gulf countries of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the
United Arab Emirates.
Unconfirmed reports put the number of dead
to be at least 20, with hundreds injured and many people unaccounted
for. “The death toll may be much higher,” said one pro-democracy
activist, “because many of the injured were left to die in the streets.
Ambulances were stopped from reaching villages where police, militia and
army had attacked with Apache helicopters.”
Another young female
activist said she feared a massacre as hundreds of army personnel
carriers were reportedly moving into villages and towns.
Doctors
told how hospitals and health centres were attacked with gunfire,
medical staff assaulted, and the injured and dead removed by state
forces.
Militia, believed to be plainclothes police, surrounded
Salmaniya hospital in the capital, Manama, and prevented medics from
entering or leaving.
Some of the doctors could not be reached by
phone last night. There were reports of heavy machine-gun fire in the
environs of Salmaniya.
A senior consultant at Naim health centre
near the Pearl Square protest camp in Manama said her staff were held at
gunpoint by security forces and were physically assaulted for “helping
terrorists”.
Yesterday began with a dawn military attack on Pearl
Square where for almost four weeks tens of thousands of anti-government
protesters demanding the establishment of a democracy have been holding a
peaceful nightly vigil. They want the autocratic US-backed regime
headed by King Hamad al-Khalifa to step down and be replaced by an
elected government.
Tanks and helicopters used live fire as troops cleared the square, burning protesters’ tents.
State
forces then targeted the villages of Sanabis, Daih, Belad and other
mainly Shia villages deemed to be supporting the anti-government
uprising. There were reports of masked soldiers in civilian clothes
raiding homes in Sitra, in the east.
State of emergency powers,
decreed on Tuesday, have imposed a curfew from 4pm to 4am and allow for
the “tracking down and arrest of suspects”.
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch yesterday condemned what it described as the violent crackdown on civilians.
One
Bahraini medic made this plea last night to the United Nations: “We are
the people of Bahrain and we are being killed brutally by the regime
with the help of Saudi military. Please help us.” Across the region,
there were demonstrations in Saudi Arabia, Lebanon and Iran against the
invasion of foreign forces.
There was widespread anger in Bahrain
and across the region at what many called a slaughter against civilians,
and what they believe is the involvement of western governments in the
repression. “We are sure that the US must have given a green light to
this violence against our people,” said one Bahraini.
The
New York Times on Tuesday reported that “a Saudi official said
the United States was informed on Sunday that the Saudi troops would
enter Bahrain on Monday”.
The crackdown, however, drew criticism
from the US, where Hillary Clinton, secretary of state, said events in
the Gulf kingdom were “alarming” and that Bahrain and its neighbours
were “on the wrong track” in their response. “There is no security
answer to this,” she told CBS News.
The US bases its Fifth Fleet in Bahrain.
IRISHTIMES