Anti-Regime Rally Held in Bahrain, Talks Fail 
		to Appease Opposition
July 31, 2011 
		Anti-regime rally held in N Bahrain 
		Press TV, Sunday, July 31, 2011 6:48AM GMT 
		 Anti-government protesters have held another rally in northern 
		Bahrain, despite the regime's continuing crackdown on demonstrations.
		
The demonstrators in the northern village of Dair called on the 
		ruling al-Khalifa regime to free all those Bahrainis detained during 
		months of protests.
The protesters also rejected the results of 
		the regime-backed “National Consensus Dialog” in Bahrain. 
Facing 
		countrywide anti-regime revolution, Manama launched the talks on July 2 
		with the alleged aim of introducing reforms in the governing system of 
		the Persian Gulf sheikdom.
The largest Bahraini opposition group, 
		al-Wefaq, quit the national talks in protest, saying the views and the 
		demands of the opposition were ignored and the talks were dominated by 
		pro-government representatives.
Al-Wefaq said that the opposition 
		has been given too small a fraction of the seats -- 35 out of 300 -- at 
		the talks.
Also on Friday, tens of thousands of Bahrainis took to 
		the streets outside the capital city of Manama to condemn the results of 
		the national dialogue, saying it had failed to address the people's 
		demands and to bring real democratic reforms in the Middle Eastern 
		country.
In February, massive protests broke out in Bahrain, with 
		people taking to the streets and calling for a constitutional monarchy 
		-- a demand that later turned into calls for the regime's downfall.
		
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates deployed military forces 
		to Bahrain in mid-March to assist the Bahraini government in its brutal 
		crackdown on the popular protests.
Bahrainis have nevertheless 
		pledged to keep up their protests until their demands are met.
		AGB/HJL/HRF
		Bahrain talks fail to appease opposition 
		Press TV, Thu Jul 28, 2011 4:40PM GMT 
		A Bahraini woman flashes the victory sign during an anti-government 
		rally in the Bahraini capital, Manama, Friday, July 22, 2011. Bahrain's 
		so-called national dialog has failed to appease the country's opposition 
		amid rising concerns over the government's determination to carve out a 
		balanced solution out of the current crisis in the Persian Gulf 
		sheikdom.
The Bahraini opposition voiced frustration at the 
		“National Consensus Dialog” with the government after the country's 
		largest opposition party, al-Wefaq, left the negotiations, Reuters 
		reported on Thursday.
Critics say al-Wefaq's departure has almost 
		drained the talks of their intended weight.
Facing countrywide 
		anti-regime revolution, Manama launched the talks on July 2 with the 
		alleged aim of introducing reforms in governing system of the Persian 
		Gulf sheikdom.
Bahrain's largest party and opposition group al-Wefaq 
		quit the negotiations, complaining that since their onset, the 
		government had been trying to muffle the voice of the opposition.
		
Al-Wefaq regretted that the opposition has been given too small a 
		fraction of the seats -- 35 out of 300 -- at the talks.
The 
		reform package forwarded by the Manama government has also been attacked 
		for failing to curb the powers of the upper house -- in which ministers 
		are directly appointed by the country's king. It is also blamed for 
		stopping short of giving greater legislative and monitoring powers to 
		the opposition.
Bahrain's National Dialog Committee said the 
		parties at the talks “did not agree on whether the Shura Council (the 
		upper house) should be granted the same powers as the parliament, and 
		whether the responsibility for lawmaking and oversight should be 
		restricted to the elected chamber.”
It also said that “delegates 
		did not reach consensus on a number of further suggestions, such as 
		limiting the term for ministers and head of government or a fixed quota 
		for women in parliament.”
Tens of thousands of Bahraini 
		protesters have been holding peaceful anti-government rallies throughout 
		the country since February, demanding an end to rule of the al-Khalifa 
		family.
Scores of people have been killed and many more arrested 
		and tortured in prisons in a government-sanctioned crackdowns on the 
		peaceful protesters since the beginning of the demonstrations.
		The Bahraini government is, meanwhile, being constantly backed by the 
		United States despite its record of human rights abuse and the numerous 
		complaints lodged against it at The Hague.
HN/HJL
		
      
      
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