http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2012/03/201239144334860869.html
| Bahrain's Shias demand reform at mass rally | |||
Tens of thousands march along a main road near capital after sermon from leading Shia cleric urging greater democracy. Last Modified: 10 Mar 2012 02:34 | |||
Tens of thousands of Bahrainis have demonstrated outside the capital Manama to demand political reforms, a year after the Gulf Arab state crushed an uprising, witnesses said. A live blog showed images of the protesters carrying banners denouncing "dictatorship" and demanding the release of detainees. "We are here for the sake of our just demands that we cannot make concessions over and we stick with them because we have sacrificed for them," Qassim said before the march, during his weekly sermon in the Shia village of Diraz. He had promised to personally lead the march, his most high-profile action in more than a year of unrest. 'Biggest demonstration' A photographer with the Reuters news agency said the main Budaiya road in the area of Diraz, and Saar, west of Manama was packed, just one hour before the protest was set to begin. "It is the biggest demonstration in the past year. I would say it could be over 100,000," he said. Nabeel Rajab, president of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, told Al Jazeera by phone from Manama that "thousands of security forces" had been deployed to close down roads leading to the protest site. "The message is that people are not happy with the government. We have clear demands: an elected government, a parliament with power, an end to sectarian discrimination, a clear redistribution of wealth and power and all demands guaranteed by the international convention on human rights," he said. Rajab added that Friday's protests were "the biggest in our history". Independent inquiry The country's majority Shia population were in the forefront of last year's protest movement in Bahrain, which erupted in February after uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia. The Sunni Muslim ruling Al Khalifa family crushed the protests one month later, imposing a period of martial law and bringing in Saudi and United Arab Emirates troops to restore order. An independent commission of inquiry, formed and funded by Bahrain's government, investigated the protests in February and March 2011.
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