Wednesday, April 20, 2011

'Anger of Bahraini people could explode'

The main Bahraini opposition group says the government is pursuing a campaign of revenge and purge on anti-regime protesters, warning about the angry people's response.


Al-Wefaq warned on Wednesday that the anger of the majority opposition “could explode” if the regime does not end its violent crackdown on the people, Reuters reported.

It said that there is no guarantee for the people's uprising to stay peaceful forever because people see their brothers and sisters getting detained and fired at.

It also blamed the Bahraini regime for what it described as a campaign aimed at removing the opposition members from state jobs.

The opposition's reaction comes as Manama, backed by Saudi-led militaries from neighboring Arab countries, continues its brutal crackdown on anti-government protesters.

“How long can we continue like this? We say every day, be peaceful, be peaceful, be peaceful...but how long will young people listen to this?” Al-Wefaq's Secretary General Sheikh Ali Salman questioned.

“But nobody can give a guarantee that the movement will continue like this and that the anger of the young people will not explode in a different way,” he said at the party headquarters in Manama.

Reports say security forces attacked houses in the eastern island of Sitra, firing rubber bullets at the occupants, including children.

Analysts blame the international community for falling short of taking adequate measures against the ruling Al Khalifa royal family.

More than two months into the popular uprising in the tiny Persian Gulf country, the Foreign Affairs Council of the European Union has urged Bahrain to enter into talks with the opposition but failed to condemn the foreign military interference in the country.

US accuses Pakistan over militant links

www.miamiherald.com
The top U.S. military officer accused Pakistan's spy agency on Wednesday of links to a powerful militant faction fighting in Afghanistan, and said that relationship was at the "heart" of tensions between Islamabad and Washington.
The comments by Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are a sign that the U.S. is not stepping down in a bruising dispute with Pakistan in recent months that has threatened their vital if often uneasy alliance in the campaign against militants.
Mullen, who is visiting Pakistan, made the comments to local Geo TV in an interview ahead of a meeting with Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani. The two men reportedly enjoy a good relationship, but Mullen said he would bring up the issue of the militant Haqqani network with him in talks about tensions between the two countries.
"Where I am not soft is on the heart of that discussion which is the Haqqani network very specifically," he said. "The Haqqani network very specifically facilitates and supports the Taliban who move in to Afghanistan to kill Americans."
"The ISI has a long-standing relationship with the Haqqani network, that doesn't mean everybody in the ISI but it's there ... I believe over time that has got to change," he said.
A spokesman for the spy agency, known by its acronym ISI, declined comment.
It has previously denied U.S. accusations, typically by anonymous officials in Washington, that it supports the Haqqani network and other Afghan Taliban factions.
Tensions between the ISI and the CIA spiked this year after American CIA contractor Raymond Davis shot and killed two Pakistanis he said were trying to rob him. The incident angered and embarrassed the government and the ISI, which complained the CIA was running covert operations in the country.
A day after Davis was released from jail after compensation was paid to the families of his victims, an American missile strike killed scores of people close to the Afghan border, prompting Gen. Kayani to make a rare public condemnation of the tactic, which Pakistan's army had previously kept quiet about.
NATO and US officials say the Haqqani network is based in northwest Pakistan and is responsible for many of the attacks in Afghanistan. Elements of the Pakistani security establishment are widely believed to tolerate or support the group because they see it as a future safeguard for their interests in Afghanistan once the Americans withdraw.
Pakistan has launched army offensives against militants in the northwest, many of whom also carry out bloody bombings inside Pakistan. But Islamabad says its forces are too stretched to allow it to move into North Waziristan, where the Haqqani network is based.
Last week, the head of the ISI traveled to Washington for talks with the CIA chief, where he reportedly asked for the CIA to reduce the frequency of the drone strikes on the Pakistani side of the border. Such attacks infuriate many Pakistanis. The government complains they kill innocents, helping drive the insurgency.
Despite the tensions, both countries need each other so much that few analysts expect ties to break down, regardless of the complaints on either side.
"U.S.-Pakistan relations have been in a very difficult patch during the last couple of months and I think there is a need to strengthen the relationship we have built up to be able to address the challenges," said Mullen. "We are doing that as we speak."