US Defends Bahrain Dictatorship
Monday, March 14, approximately 1,000 Saudi soldiers in armored vehicles
entered Bahrain to help put down the protesters at the invitation of the
Bahrainian king. Now joining us to talk about what's happened since
Monday in Bahrain and the underlying causes of the protest and what he
expects to come next is Husain Abdulla.
He's director of the Americans
for Democracy and Human Rights in Bahrain, and he joins us from Alabama.
Thanks for joining us, Husain.
Husain Abdulla is director of Americans for Democracy and Human Rights in Bahrain
CORRECTION:
Paul Jay said "On Monday Febraury 14th,
approximately a thousand Saudi soldiers in armored vehicles entered
Bahrain"; however Saudi Arabia entered Bahrain on March 14th.
PAUL JAY: Welcome
to The Real News Network. I'm Paul Jay in Washington. And on Monday,
February 14, approximately 1,000 Saudi soldiers in armored vehicles
entered Bahrain to help put down the protesters at the invitation of the
Bahrainian king. Now joining us to talk about what's happened since
Monday in Bahrain and the underlying causes of the protest and what he
expects to come next is Husain Abdulla. He's director of the Americans
for Democracy and Human Rights in Bahrain, and he joins us from Alabama.
Thanks for joining us, Husain. HUSAIN ABDULLA: Thank you.
JAY:
So if I understand it correctly, you're a small businessman in Alabama,
and the Americans for Democracy in Bahrain is a national organization
that has members across the country.
ABDULLA: Correct.
JAY: What prompted you to form the organization? And have you been back to Bahrain since you founded it?
ABDULLA:
Well, as a Bahraini American, I did not find any real representation in
the United States for issues that relate to where I came from, home for
me. No one advocate for human rights, religious freedom, democracy for
the people of Bahrain. So me and some other Bahraini Americans decided,
why not create a front or an organization that does exactly that?
JAY: Where does your funding come from?
ABDULLA:
It's from us, from members within the Bahraini-American community. We
fund it ourself. We travel using our own personal money, and whatever
expense that comes, you know, we fund it personally.
JAY: If I understand it correctly, you left when you were about 20 years old. Have you been back?
ABDULLA:
If I do go back, I'll be arrested and probably tortured and charged
with some heinous crime according to the Bahraini court of law.
JAY: For what reason, do you think?ABDULLA:
Basically for my activities in the United States, because what I'm
doing, it's showing the true pictures of the regime in Bahrain.JAY: Okay. So tell us what happened Monday and what's happened since.
ABDULLA:
Bahrain no longer is an independent country. It is occupied by Saudi
Arabia and by some GCC countries like United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and
now, recently, Kuwait. These troops came to attack the pro-democracy,
peaceful, unarmed people of Bahrain. They first, on the 15th, attacked
the different big cities, villages in the country, to spread fear on the
people, and then the problem when they attack the symbol of democracy
where the protesters has been camping for weeks, the Pearl Square or the
Pearl Roundabout. And they eventually demolished that symbol, thinking
that after demolishing it they would be able to quieten the
pro-democracy movement in the country. The Saudi forces have killed
Bahrainis. Their hands are full of Bahraini blood. People have tortured
Bahrainis and also injured so many, arrested so many, that we don't know
where they are right now.
JAY: And what's the state of things in the last two, three days? Are protests continuing?
ABDULLA:
Yes, they are. There is strong resiliency, defiant bravery. The people
are not going to stop, because they know if they give up and give in to
this pressure from Saudi Arabia and to this invasion and occupation,
basically they'll be treated like slaves all their lives. So either live
free or die free.
JAY: Now, the US government and
President Obama have said the reason why there's no need for more
pressure on Bahrain, or even some intervention, as there's been in
Libya, is because the king seems willing to have certain political
reforms. So is there some sign of some reform?
ABDULLA: No,
and I'm very disappointed from this hypocrisy that's coming from the
White House. When there is a revolution in Egypt, Libya, and Tunisia,
somehow we're supporting that, even reluctantly. However, when it is in
Bahrain, I see this blatant support to the regime in allowing the regime
with cold blood to kill innocent Bahrainis. Looks like somehow the
Bahraini blood is less important than the Libyan or Egyptian blood.
Also, the State Department is issuing some weak and very negative
statements calling for both sides to restrain. I wonder what kind of
"restrain" you want from an unarmed Bahraini civilian. The restraint
should come from the forces that using live bullets.
JAY: So why do you think there is such hypocrisy?
ABDULLA:
Because Bahrain is a Fifth Fleet base. There is also, I think, an
agreement made between the Obama administration and the Saudi government
that we'll give you the green light for a certain period of time. See
if you can crush this movement. If not, we have a plan B. And we need
your support in Libya. Therefore, what you've seen, that soon after the
Saudi troops enter Bahrain, there was a strong support from the GCC
countries to the no-fly zone, which they initially opposed.
JAY:
The Gulf Cooperation Council, it's under this rubric that the troops
have gone in, if I understand it correctly. And because they're invited
in, it's not considered a foreign intervention under normal
international law.
ABDULLA: GCC charter does allow
countries to seek help from neighboring GCC countries (Gulf Cooperation
Council). If those countries were attacked from a foreign force, if they
were invaded by foreign force to protect the nation, to protect the
people of that country, there is nowhere in the GCC charter that says
that if a country--the country can seek help from neighboring country or
other GCC country to kill or to suppress democratic movement in the
country. So this is an invasion. This is--you cannot call Saddam's
invasion to Kuwait as an invasion and occupation and call the movement
of Saudi Arabia into Bahrain something else.JAY: They're
suggesting under international law a government has a right to ask
another country to come in. You don't think that's true?
ABDULLA:
That's not true, because United Nation stated clearly that what is
taking place in Bahrain might be elevated to clear violations of
international law, because what they're doing, they're seeking the help
of Saudi Arabia. Against who, exactly? Against the people of Bahrain,
against the majority of the people of Bahrain. So you want to bring a
foreign nation to kill your own people, I don't think that is considered
seeking help.
JAY: Let's go back to the issue of who makes
up the Gulf Cooperation Council. And I'm particularly interested in
Qatar. Saudi Arabia's kind of a more obvious story in a sense that the
Saudi monarchy has made very little pretensions about democracy or being
on the side of the reform movement anywhere. But Qatar has, through Al
Jazeera and its expressed policies, at least what it advocates, has said
it's on the side of these democracy movements. On the other hand,
Qatar's part of this supporting Saudi's invasion or intrusion into
Bahrain. What do you make of that?
ABDULLA: Well, Qatar
supports democracies that is not on their doorstep. They supported the
democracy movement in Egypt because Qatar and Hosni Mubarak did not have
a good relationship. They supported the movement in Tunisia because
that is far away from them. They are in Libya because that was a
deal--according to the deal that was made. However, in Bahrain they're
not supporting the movement in Bahrain. Actually, there is a gag order.
You will not find any positive or any major news about Bahrain in Al
Jazeera. That tells you there is a hypocrisy, because they don't want
democracy next door, because if if there is real democracy next door,
guess what? Qatar will have real democracy. People in Qatar are going to
say: if people in Bahrain can choose their government, why can't we do
the same thing? So I will not put my bet on Qatar supporting democratic
movements in the Arab world. They are doing what the United States is
doing right now, pick and choose which revolution to support.
JAY:
The population of Bahrain is about a million, and maybe half of those
people are guest workers. And then in terms of religious division
amongst the Muslims, if I understand it, it's about 60, 70, perhaps even
80 percent are Shia, whereas the ruling family is Sunni. Talk a bit
about these various divisions and what role do they play in the movement
that's happening now.
ABDULLA: The majority of the
population, as you stated, around 70 percent are Shia Muslim, 30 percent
are Sunni Muslim. And the ruling family belong to the Sunni sect of
Islam, the government throughout the years. You see, Bahrain situation
or the pro-democracy movement in Bahrain is not recently born. It's an
old movement. The government use the sectarian flag every time there is
an issue in the country, every time there is a demand by the people.
However, the issue in Bahrain is not sectarian. Sunni and Shia Muslim
lived side by side each other for years for a long time. This is more of
a demand movement. This is more of a pro-democracy movement. There are
Sunni Muslim, which is the minority in the country, are protesting with
their Shia brothers in Bahrain. There are Sunni political prisoners in
the country, in Bahrain. So the government want to use it as a sectarian
[inaudible] or a sectarian flag and try to say that Iran behind it, so,
you know, the West will be cautious, they will be scared.
JAY:
Now, if I understand it correctly, in 1970 there was a UN-sponsored
poll of Bahranian public opinion asking people if they wanted to be part
of Iran or an independent Bahrain, and the majority of people, and I
assume the majority of Shia, said they wanted an independent Bahrain.
They did not want to be part of Iran. So this Iranian hand, you think,
is not real.
ABDULLA: It's not real. First, I'm from there,
and I talk to people every day, those youth who are protesting. No one
wants to be part of Iran. This is a Bahraini national issue. And if you
wanted to be part of Iran, we had an opportunity to be part of Iran. The
people of Bahrain are Arab. The people of Iran are not Arab. We have
two different cultures. We're neighbors, we respect our neighbors, but
we don't want to be belonging to no one. That includes Saudi Arabia or
Iran. The issue of Bahrain, the political problem, is a local issue, is
an indigenous problem, has nothing to do with Iran. And our own
secretary of defense, Robert Gates, said that Iran has nothing to do
with the recent uprising in the country. It is basically a political
problem. There are people who thinks, people who believe they have
grievances that are not heard by the Bahraini government.
JAY:
As we said, half the population are guest workers, which is--in Qatar I
think it's even more; it's something like two-thirds or three-quarters
of the population of the country are guest workers and don't have
citizenship. Are the guest workers participating in the protest? Do they
have any role to play?
ABDULLA: No. The guest workers
actually leaving the country because they--it's became a war zone. You
know, FedEx left the country, no longer has offices in Bahrain. Other
multinational corporation are threatening to leave the country. Formula
One abandoned their race in Bahrain. So many other trade conferences
canceled in the country. Al Khalifa made Bahrain into a war theater.
They're going to kill everyone that is against them. They're going to--.
JAY: Al Khalifa being the royal family and the king.
ABDULLA: Yes, correct.JAY:
But I'm asking about guest workers themselves, who have no rights and
perhaps are the most discriminated against. Have they been involved in
the protests at all? Or do they feel too afraid 'cause they have no
standing now?
ABDULLA: They feel too afraid. Plus you see
the issue is an indigenous issue. It is issue for democracy, voting
rights, human rights. So when it comes to the guest workers who are in
the country, no, they're not participating in these uprisings. Actually,
they're leaving the country.
JAY: And what do you want to see from Western countries? What policy do you think should be being followed now?
ABDULLA:
There should be a clear call that Saudi forces are not welcome in
Bahrain. They're a problem, not part of the solution. They should
withdraw immediately. And there should be an investigation for all kind
of atrocities that took place in the country while the Saudi troops were
there and Bahraini troops, what they have done. Add to that there
should be a clear order to release all the political prisoners in the
country and start an immediate process of democracy. Also, apply
pressure on the Bahraini government to listen to the citizens of Bahrain
and allow the people of Bahrain the opportunity of self-governance.
JAY:
Is there any move at the level of the United Nations to bring this
forward to the Security Council, the Saudi intervention in Bahrain?
ABDULLA:
Not to the Security Council, but, yes, there are movement in the United
Nations. The United Nation made a very good statement or very positive
statements that condemned what's taken place in Bahrain and elevated it
to a level that it is probably in the way of violating international
law. When it comes to human rights organizations, civil society groups,
you name it, condemnation is just flying left and right. But the silence
from the West, and especially the two big allies of Bahrain, United
States and United Kingdom, their stand is shameful.
JAY: Thanks very much for joining us.ABDULLA: Thank you.JAY: And thank you for joining us on The Real News Network.
End of TranscriptDISCLAIMER:
Please note that transcripts for The Real News Network are typed from a
recording of the program. TRNN cannot guarantee their complete
accuracy.
|