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“Way to Pearl-square”

“Way to Pearl-square”

— 1 year ago with 1 note

#bahrain  #البحرين 
hagooos:

إن الملوك بلاءُ حيثمآ حلّوا

إهداء إلى الملوك في العالم أجمعين

hagooos:

إن الملوك بلاءُ حيثمآ حلّوا

إهداء إلى الملوك في العالم أجمعين

(Source: adab-arabi)

— 1 year ago with 223 notes

#morocco  #Jordan  #saudi arabia  #bahrain  #Qatar  #UAE  #Oman  #Sudan  #Syria  #Egypt  #Libya  #ALgeria  #Muaritania  #Djibouti  #Lebanon  #Palestine  #Yemen  #Iraq 
The Cable: Obama administration using loophole to quietly sell arms package to Bahrain →

Posted By Josh Rogin  

President Barack Obama’s administration has been delaying its planned $53 million arms sale to Bahrain due to human rights concerns and congressional opposition, but this week administration officials told several congressional offices that they will move forward with a new and different package of arms sales — without any formal notification to the public.

The congressional offices that led the charge to oppose the original Bahrain arms sales package are upset that the State Department has decided to move forward with the new package. The opposition to Bahrain arms sales is led by Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Rep. Jim McGovern (D-MA), and also includes Senate Foreign Relations Middle East and North Africa Subcommittee chairman Robert Casey (D-PA), Senate Majority Whip Richard Durbin (D-IL), and Sens. Robert Menendez (D-NJ), Benjamin Cardin (D-MD), and Marco Rubio (R-FL).

Wyden and Rep. Jim McGovern (D-MA) have each introduced a resolution in their respective chambers to prevent the U.S. government from going through with the original sale, which would have included 44 armored, high-mobility Humvees and over 300 advanced missiles.

The State Department has not released details of the new sale, and Congress has not been notified through the regular process, which requires posting the information on the Defense Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA) website. The State Department simply briefed a few congressional offices and is going ahead with the new sale, arguing it didn’t meet the threshold that would require more formal notifications and a public explanation.

At today’s State Department press briefing, The Cable asked spokeswoman Victoria Nulandabout the new sale. She acknowledged the new package but didn’t have any details handy.

Our congressional sources said that State is using a legal loophole to avoid formally notifying Congress and the public about the new arms sale. The administration can sell anything to anyone without formal notification if the sale is under $1 million. If the total package is over $1 million, State can treat each item as an individual sale, creating multiple sales of less than $1 million and avoiding the burden of notification, which would allow Congress to object and possibly block the deal.

We’re further told that State is keeping the exact items in the sale secret, but is claiming they are for Bahrain’s “external defense” and therefore couldn’t be used against protesters. Of course, that’s the same argument that State made about the first arms package, which was undercut byvideos showing the Bahraini military using Humvees to suppress civilian protesters.

Regardless, congressional opponents to Bahrain arms sales are planning to fight back. Wyden is circulating a letter now to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton stating that Bahrain’s government continues to commit human rights violations and should not be rewarded with U.S. arms sales.

“The Bahraini government has shown little progress in improving their human rights record over the last few months and in some ways, their record has gotten worse,” Wyden told The Cable on Friday. “Protesters are still being hurt and killed, midnight arrests are still happening and the government continues to deny access to human rights monitors. The kingdom of Bahrain has not shown a true good faith effort to improve human rights in their country and the U.S. should not be rewarding them as if they have.”

“Supplying arms to a regime that continues to persecute its citizens is not in the best interest of the United States,” Wyden said. “When the government of Bahrain shows that it respects the human rights of its citizens it will become more stable and a better ally in the region; only then should arms sales from the U.S. resume.”

That point was echoed by McGovern, who pledged to oppose any arms sales to Bahrain.

“The government of Bahrain continues to perpetrate serious human rights abuses and to deny independent monitors access to the country,” McGovern told The Cable. “Until Bahrain takes more substantial and lasting steps to protect the rights of its own citizens, the United States should not reward its government with any military sales.” 

A State Department official declined to give specifics of the new arms package to The Cable but said that Bahrain was moving in the right direction.

“We have seen some important initial steps from the Bahraini government in implementing the Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry’s recommendations, but more needs to be done,” the official said. “We urge the government of Bahrain to take action on the full range of recommendations that we believe will help lay the foundation for longer-term reform and reconciliation.”

Cherif Bassiouni, the chair of the Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry that investigated the government crackdown on protests in 2011, recently said in an interview that the administration is not doing enough to pressure the Bahrain regime. “There is merit in naming and shaming and embarrassing, in pushing, in enlisting public opinion, domestic and international. This is not the style of Secretary Clinton or President Obama, and I’m not sure they are necessarily doing the right choice,” he said.

Cole Bockenfeld, director of advocacy for the Project on Middle East Democracy (POMED), told The Cable on Friday that the new sale will be perceived by both the government of Bahrain and those in the opposition as a green light for the government to continue its repression.

“In the broader picture of the Arab Spring, this further erodes the credibility of U.S. rhetoric about democracy and human rights in the region,” he said. “Rewarding regimes that repress peaceful dissent with arms sales simply does not square with the administration’s rhetoric. The administration can no longer afford to endorse the status quo in Bahrain.”

Maryam al-Khawaja, the head of the foreign relations office at the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, told The Cable on Friday that the sale of U.S. arms to the Bahraini regime sends the wrong message to the people of Bahrain, and the region in general.

“This message of ‘business as usual’ will only strengthen the regime’s belief that there will continue to be lack of consequences to their human rights violations internationally,” she said. “At a time when the United States is already being criticized for practicing double standards when it comes to the so-called Arab spring, to the protesters in Bahrain, the U.S. selling any arms to the government of Bahrain is exactly like Russia selling arms to Syria. Bahrain has become the United States’ test on how serious they are about standing against human rights violations, and they are failing miserably.”

UPDATE: Late Friday evening, the State Department sent out a lenghty statement on the arms sales:

We are maintaining a pause on most security assistance for Bahrain pending further progress on reform. 

During the last two weeks, representatives from the State Department and Department of Defense briefed appropriate Congressional staff on our intention to release some previously notified equipment needed for Bahrain’s external defense and support of Fifth Fleet operations.  This includes spare parts and maintenance of equipment.  None of these items can be used against protestors.

This isn’t a new sale nor are we using a legal loophole.  The items that we briefed to Congress were notified and cleared by the Hill previously or are not large enough to require Congressional notification.  In fact, we’ve gone above and beyond what is legally or customarily required by consulting with Congressional staff on items that do not require Congressional notification. 

We have and will continue to use our security assistance to reinforce reforms in Bahrain.  We have seen some important initial steps from the Bahraini government in implementing the Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry’s (BICI) recommendations, but more needs to be done.  We urge the government of Bahrain to take action on the full range of recommendations that we believe will help lay the foundation for longer-term reform and reconciliation.   

We will continue to consult extensively with Congress on this policy.

(Source: twitter.com)

— 1 year ago

#البحرين  #bahrain 
KABOBfest: Let’s Talk About Sectarianism, Baby →

BY   JANUARY 18, 2012 

It’s always interesting to note what country is typically ‘forgotten’ when listing the Arab countries that protests erupted in 2011.

Sunni-Shia unity in Bahrain

‘Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Syria, Yemen…’

or ‘Tunisia, Egypt, Bahrain, Libya, Yemen…’

The geniuses amongst you will notice that Syria and Bahrain are included in one list, while excluded in the other. The unfortunate truth of the matter is, when speaking to many Arabs about the Arab Revolutions, they will often either exclude Syria or Bahrain.

Why? More often than not, sectarianism.

We have all heard it before; “The Bahrainis aren’t democrats! It’s just the Shia protesting so that they can take over the country and turn it into Iran!”

Or, you have it the other way around; “Syria isn’t a revolution! It’s just Saudi backed Salafis who want to kill all the Alawis and Christians!”

Those who peddle in sectarianism are often the worst hypocrites. Whilst railing against Saudi oppression on the Shia of Qatif or Bahrain, they will repeat similar sectarian narratives against protesters in Syria. And vice versa.

What is most tragic is that the people whose  lives are on the line in both countries do reject these claims and recognize that their struggle against dictatorship and tyranny is a universal fight. Within the Syrian refugee camps of Turkey the refugees were adamant that their revolution was not sectarian. The people of ‘Sunni’ Jisr al-Shughour said that the Alawis were their brothers and many were just as oppressed as any Sunni. In Yemen, I witnessed many protesters carrying the flags of both Bahrain and Syria, supporting both in their uprisings.

And yet some continue to be blinded by their prejudices.

Looking across the  so-called “Arab World”, it’s easy to see sectarianism rearing its ugly head again. As soon as the Americans ‘withdrew’ from Iraq late last year, the Iraqi coalition government set about dividing itself on largely sectarian lines. ‘Sunni’ Vice-President Tariq al-Hashemi was accused of being behind bomb attacks, he responded by fleeing to Kurdish northern Iraq, and painted himself as a martyr in the face of Nouri al-Maliki, a ‘Shia’ who many see as Iran’s puppet. Worse followed, with the apparent al-Qaeda attacks on the 22nd December that killed 69 people.

It should be remembered that  al-Qaeda attacks in Iraq target both Shia and Sunni. A particularly inspiring story was that of two Sunni soldiers, Lieutenant Nazham Faleh and Private Ali Ahmed Sabah, who gave their lives protecting a crowd of Shia pilgrims from a suicide bomber. And when al-Qaeda in Iraq was at its strongest, it was the Sunni Awakening Councils that really brought it down.

This idea that because we belong to different sects or religions, and thus we must enter into perpetual conflict is completely wrong. Sectarian hatred of the other is not an inherent, primordial part of Arab society. Sure, in times of strife and war the chances of intercommunal violence can unfortunately increase, but this need not be the norm.

A person is not sectarian merely by being part of a certain sect nor is the existence of different sects in a society inherently a bad thing. Quite the opposite, when there is peace in such a society, it shows a society at its zenith, one where all opinions are accepted, allowed and flourish together. No doubt, sectarianism in its negative sense, during times of war, has led to some of the worst atrocities in modern Arab history.

Those who peddle in sectarianism are often the worst hypocrites. Whilst railing against Saudi oppression on the Shia of Qatif or Bahrain, they will repeat similar sectarian narratives against protesters in Syria. And vice versa.

As I have said, and despite it being the widely held opinion, sectarianism is not the historical norm. The medieval Arab world did not witness the massacres of ‘heretics’ that Europe committed. This was because the concept simply did not gain much attention. There was no Pope, no central authority to direct and fan such flames. The ‘Mihna‘ of the 9th century, where the Caliph attempted to get scholars to agree to a statement of be considered heretics, failed and banished the widespread use of the term, and its associate takfir, until the 18th-19th century.

Unfortunately, the emergence of certain groups in that period brought forward the concept of takfir, and we are saddled with the consequences today.

But let’s not pretend that the causes are only internal. It is no coincidence that sectarianism emerged stronger with the concept of the nation-state. The colonial powers that directly established artificial states like Lebanon and Iraq employed old tricks like divide-and-rule (tricks that continue to this day – see post-war Iraqi Governing Council). The mentality of many of these colonialists can really be summed up in the words of a Jesuit missionary, Riccadonna, in 19th century Mount Lebanon, who disparaged the neighbourliness between Christian and Muslim villagers:

We are sorry to say that there was a sort of coexistence between the Christians and Muslims of Sayda. They visited each other frequently … These latter [the Christians] joined in the important Muslim feasts, and the Muslims joined in the Christian feasts.

And that, to Mr. Riccadonna, was a bad thing.

It need not be this way. Sectarianism, the kind that is one of the many obstacles against an Arab nation from uniting and advancing, is a cancer that must be fought. And if you are one of the hypocrites that disagree with the freedom of others because of their sects, then shame on you.

— 1 year ago with 4 notes

#Syria  #Bahrain  #Arab Spring  #colonialism