http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=MTA2NTU5ODgwNA==

Activists call for democracy in Gulf region


Published Date: February 10, 2011 

KUWAIT: Gulf activists yesterday urged conservative monarchies which have ruled 
the region for centuries to embrace democracy and freedom of expression. They 
also warned Gulf authorities, especially in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, against 
cracking down on activists planning to stage peaceful protests, and urged the 
United Arab Emirates to release an activist arrested last week. "We hope that 
the ruling families in the Gulf realise the importance of democratic 
transformation to which our people aspire," said a
statement signed by the coordinator of the Gulf Civil Society Forum, Anwar 
Al-Rasheed.

The Forum includes dozens of liberal intellectuals, academics, writers and 
rights activists drawn from the six Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states. The 
group also called for the ruling families to "understand that it is time to 
free all political detainees and prisoners of conscience and issue 
constitutions that meet modern day demands." "The Gulf peoples look forward for 
their countries to be among nations supporting freedom, the rule of law and 
civil and democratic rule which have become a part of peoples' basic rights," 
the statement said.

The GCC comprises Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United 
Arab Emirates, most of which do not have constitutions. Only Kuwait and Bahrain 
have elected parliaments with legislative powers, but in Kuwait unelected 
ministers automatically become MPs while in Bahrain an appointed upper house 
has the power to block parliamentary resolutions. The statement called on 
Bahraini authorities to deal peacefully with a protest planned next Monday by 
activists whose demands include the release of political prisoners and the 
resignation of the prime minister.

The statement also warned Saudi security agencies against using repressive 
means to curb protests and demonstrations. Saudi activists launched a campaign 
on Facebook - a social networking website tapped in Tunisia's uprising and 
Egypt's revolt - to call for a constitutional monarchy, parliamentary elections 
and an independent judiciary. The Forum also condemned the "repressive arrest" 
of Emirati citizen Hassan Mohamed Al-Hammadi, who was detained last Friday 
after delivering a speech in support of the Egyptian uprising, and called for 
his immediate release. - AFP

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