Demands for reform escalate to calls for ouster of monarchy in Bahrain; thousands take to streets in Libya, Yemen.

 


 

Protests continued in Lybia, Bahrain and Yemen on Friday, where government attempts to stop Egypt-style pro-democracy demonstrations with violence have thus far failed
In Libya on Friday, thousands took to  the streets in the city of Benghazi, the BBC reported.

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Human Rights Watch said that 24 people were killed in clashes between protesters and Libyan security forces on Thursday.

Some funerals for those killed were expected to be held Friday in Benghazi and al-Bayda.

Witnesses in Yemen’s southern port city of Aden said angry protesters set fire to the municipal building and a third demonstrator has been killed as protests stretch into an eighth day.

Hundreds of protesters demonstrated in the country’s second largest city until early hours Friday demanding the ouster of the president, a key US ally in battling al-Qaida.

A call spread by Facebook and Twitter is urging Yemenis to join a series of “One Million People” rallies on a so-called “Friday of Rage” in all Yemeni cities.

Protesters are demanding the ouster of President Ali Abdullah Saleh, in power for 32 years.

In Taiz, Yemen’s second largest city, thousands of government supporters took to the streets Friday ahead of expected afternoon protests.

Thousands of funeral mourners called for the downfall of Bahrain’s ruling monarchy as burials began Friday after a deadly assault on pro-reform protesters that has brought army tanks into the streets of the most strategic Western ally in the Gulf.

The cries against Bahrain’s king and his inner circle reflect an escalation of the demands from a political uprising that began by only asking for a weakening of the Sunni monarchy’s hold on top government posts and addressing discrimination by the Shi’ite majority in the tiny island nation.

The mood, however, appears to have turned toward defiance of the entire ruling system after the brutal attack Thursday on a protest encampment in Bahrain’s capital Manama, which left at least five dead, more than 230 injured and put the nation under emergency-style footing with military forces in key areas and checkpoints on main roadways.

“The regime has broken something inside of me … All of these people gathered today have had something broken in them,” said Ahmed Makki Abu Taki, whose 27-year-old brother Mahmoud was killed in the pre-dawn sweep through the protest camp in Manama’s Pearl Square. “We used to demand for the prime minister to step down, but now our demand is for the ruling family to get out.”

Outside a village mosque, several thousands mourners gathered to bury three men killed in the crackdown. The first body, covered in black velvet, was passed hand to hand toward a grave as it was being dug.

Amid the Shiite funeral rites, many chanted for the removal of King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa and the entire Sunni dynasty that has ruled for more than two centuries in Bahrain, the first nation in the Gulf to feel the pressure for changes sweeping the Arab world.

There were no security forces near the mosque on the island of Sitra, where three of those killed had lived.

The capital and other areas remained under the close watch of the military and police — which includes various nationalities from around the region under a policy by Bahrain’s ruling system to give citizenship and jobs to other Sunnis to try to offset the Shi’ites, who account for about 70 percent of the po

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Motivated, teamwork-oriented, and responsible manegment , Development, Data analyst with significant experience in increasing comprehension of reports and presentations, and working in the Somaliland media, human rights, social affairs, democracy and the nation-building process for the past two decades, by the average professional.experien and Highly educated, possessing a Professional Certificate of Journalism ,DIploma and BA Journalism and Politics.

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