Bahrain frees prisoners to mollify protesters
The prisoner release was a further concession to the mainly Shi’ite protesters who took to the streets last week to demand a constitutional monarchy and an elected government, emboldened by a surge of popular unrest across the Arab world.
It also preceded the expected return to Bahrain of Hassan Mushaimaa, leader of the hardline Shi’ite Haq party, one of two people tried in absentia for his part in the alleged coup plot.
Mohammed al-Tajer, a lawyer for the 23 activists, told Reuters that about 250 prisoners had been released. Most were detained as part of a crackdown launched on some Shi’ite opposition groups last August and during subsequent protests.
The opposition describes youngsters arrested during clashes with security forces in Shi’ite villages as political prisoners.
Tajer said detainees picked up in last week’s confrontations between security forces and protesters had been freed earlier.
He said it was not clear if the 25 charged in the coup plot had received royal pardons or if the case could be revived.
"If this is just a suspension of the charges, they might bring up the case again or file other charges. We’re waiting for an official statement," he said.
Opposition leaders welcomed the prisoner release.
"Allowing the people to protest and releasing those people are positive moves," said Ibrahim Mattar of the main Shi’ite Wefaq party. Opposition groups were waiting for the royal family to accept the principle of a constitutional monarchy before they would enter into a dialogue offered by the king, he added.
Majority Shi’ites have long complained of discrimination in Sunni-ruled Bahrain, which is a close U.S. and Saudi ally.
King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa was in Riyadh to welcome home Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah from an extended absence due to ill-health, a sign of tight ties between the Bahraini royals and their far stronger Saudi counterparts. Saudi Arabia is concerned unrest in Bahrain might spread to its own Shi’ite minority.
Bahrain’s 70 percent Shi’ite majority wants to overhaul a system where parliament has little power and policy remains the preserve of an elite centered on the royal al-Khalifa family.
The al-Khalifa dynasty has ruled Bahrain for 200 years, and the family dominates a cabinet led by the king’s uncle, who has been prime minister since independence from Britain in 1971.
Before the prisoner release, Bahrain’s rulers had agreed to allow peaceful protests and had offered dialogue on reform.
"The main point we are waiting for is the initiative for political reform. Until now they didn’t promise anything," Mattar said. "If they don’t say it, we are wasting our time."
YOUTHS EMERGE FROM JAIL
Protesters had demanded the release of political prisoners in Bahrain, where seven people were killed and hundreds wounded in demonstrations last week.
In the first releases, late on Tuesday night, two dozen relatives waited at the jail for teenaged prisoners, who emerged one by one with solemn, unshaven faces. Some waved victory signs. One waiting mother tossed a sprig of basil in the air to welcome her freed son, a Reuters photographer said.
The 23 men jailed for the coup plot, who include some Shi’ite clerics, were put on trial in October after a broad security crackdown on some Shi’ite opposition groups in August.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton praised Bahrain’s king and crown prince for freeing political prisoners, allowing peaceful demonstrations and offering talks with the opposition.
"These steps will need to be followed by concrete actions and reforms," she told reporters on Tuesday, warning that "there is no place for violence against peaceful protesters."
Bahrain is a small but strategic U.S. ally that hosts the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet in a region shadowed by fears of Iran’s nuclear ambitions.
In Bahrain, as in Egypt and Tunisia, the United States has tried to walk a difficult line in dealing with popular revolts against entrenched Arab leaders long allied to Washington.
"Across the Middle East, people are calling on their governments to be more open, more accountable and more responsive. Without genuine progress toward open and accountable political systems the gap between people and their governments can only grow and instability can only deepen," Clinton said.
Mushaimaa, the Shi’ite opposition leader, was due to have returned from exile in London on Tuesday, but was barred from a Bahrain-bound flight from Beirut where he had stopped over.
Tens of thousands of Shi’ite protesters filled streets in Manama on Tuesday demanding the fall of the Sunni-run government in the biggest protest since unrest began last week.
The Bahrain government denies it treats Shi’ites unfairly. In a rally covered by state television on Monday, thousands carried Bahraini flags and signs supporting unity and dialogue.
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