Saya kira, lambat atau cepat akan juga terjadi perubahan di Arab Saudia. Lihat 
saja pada kekuasaaan Otoman.

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jusfiq 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, March 06, 2011 10:41 AM
  Subject: [proletar] CNN: Saudi security forces to crack down on any unlawful 
protesters


    

  Saudi Arabia juga mulai dilanda angin perubahan...

  CNN.com 

  Saudi security forces to crack down on any unlawful protesters

  (CNN) -- Coming off two days of demonstrations, Saudi Arabia's Interior 
Ministry warned Saturday that it would crack down on protesters who continue to 
take their grievances to the streets.

  Saudi security forces will be "authorized to take all measures against anyone 
who tries to break the law and cause disorder," the ministry said, according to 
the country's state-run news agency.

  The government cited how some were trying "to get around the systems" and 
"achieve illegitimate goals."

  The Interior Ministry spokesman said that kingdom law prevents all kinds of 
demonstrations, protests, strikes and even a call for them because they're 
against Sharia law and Saudi values and traditions.

  In response, Ibrahim al-Mugaiteeb, president of the Human Rights First 
Society, told CNN that the Interior Ministry is "not at all sensitive" to the 
massive unrest sweeping the Arab world.

  "I'm hoping that the Ministry of the Interior and the government of Saudi 
Arabia will not choose to take the security solution road because that was 
already tested in other Arab countries and, by God, it did not work," said 
al-Mugaiteeb, who's in Saudi Arabia.

  On Saturday, the Saudi government downplayed Friday's protests in the Eastern 
Province, saying the people weren't calling for a regime change.

  "The protests that took place in the Eastern Province were small and were not 
political in nature," a Saudi government official told CNN. "The protesters 
weren't calling for regime change, they were asking for more jobs and calling 
for release of prisoners they feel were imprisoned unjustly."

  The official, who asked not to be named because he was not authorized to 
speak to the media, said Friday's protest was not worrisome. "We don't feel 
they will spread throughout the kingdom or become bigger in nature," he said.

  Demonstrators who protested in Eastern Province were demanding the release of 
Shiite prisoners they feel are being held without cause.

  An outspoken Shiite prayer leader who demonstrators say was arrested more 
than a week ago was a focal point of the "day of rage" protest, said Ibrahim 
al-Mugaiteeb, president of the Human Rights First Society.

  Sheikh Tawfeeq Al-Amer was arrested Sunday after he gave a sermon two days 
earlier, on February 25, stating that Saudi Arabia should become a 
constitutional monarchy, human rights activists said.

  Friday's protest comes on the heels of two similar demonstrations held in the 
province Thursday, al-Mugaiteeb said, when about 200 protesters in the city of 
Qatif and 100 protesters in the city of Awamiyya called for the release of 
Shiite prisoners.

  Al-Mugaiteeb said authorities arrested 22 people who participated in 
Thursday's protest in Qatif.

  "We deplore this action by the Saudi security forces," he said.

  Another protest took place in Riyadh after Friday prayer, according to two 
Saudi activists. The sources asked not to be identified because of concerns for 
their safety.

  According to the activists, as many as 40 anti-government demonstrators 
gathered outside Al-Rajhi Mosque for a short protest. At least one man involved 
in organizing the protest was arrested by Saudi police, the activists said.

  The activists said the protesters attracted a crowd of worshipers leaving the 
mosque. Some of the protesters carried signs showing a map of Saudi Arabia that 
did not contain the words "Kingdom of Saudi Arabia," a clear affront to the 
Saudi royal family.

  The government official told CNN that he was not aware of any protests or 
arrests in Riyadh.

  When asked about the various rights groups in the kingdom who have been 
calling for the creation of a constitutional monarchy over the course of the 
past 2 weeks, the government official on Saturday stated, "Yes, there are 
groups here asking for more rights, calling for constitutional reforms, and 
that is their right to do so. King Abdullah has always encouraged a national 
dialogue and continues to do so."

  The official insisted that the king "is doing all he can to improve things 
for Saudis."

  "But in Saudi Arabia -- it's not like other countries -- we don't have or 
allow protests here. If people have a grievance, they can go and address it 
with the governors of their provinces or they can go to the Royal Court and 
address grievances directly there," the official said.

  Saudi Arabia has cracked down on protests in the past.

  Shiites are a minority in Saudi Arabia. They live primarily in the Eastern 
Province, where many major oil companies operate.

  The protests come as sectarian violence between Shiites and Sunnis flares in 
neighboring Bahrain.

  Analysts believe protests in Bahrain could spill over into Saudi Arabia's oil 
fields, located mostly in Shiite provinces.

  After three months abroad for medical treatment, Saudi King Abdullah returned 
home late last month to a Middle East shaken by unrest, and announced a series 
of sweeping measures aimed at relieving economic hardship and meeting with 
Bahrain's beleaguered monarch.

  The Saudi government released three Shiite political prisoners ahead of the 
king's return.


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  © 2008 Cable News Network.



  

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