Kapan orang Shia di Indonesia diserang kayak orang Ahmadiyah? Orang Arab 
majikan 
orang Islam Indonesia itu doyan koq nyerang orang Shiah


http://www.nzherald.co.nz/middle-east/news/article.cfm?l_id=8&objectid=10720674

Harsh crackdown on Shia worshippers in Bahrain5:30 AM Thursday Apr 21, 2011


Bahraini Government forces backed by Saudi Arabian troops are  destroying 
mosques and places of worship of the Shia majority in the  island kingdom in a 
move likely to exacerbate religious hatred across  the Muslim world.
"So far they have destroyed seven Shia mosques and about 50 religious  meeting 
houses," said Ali al-Aswad, an MP in the Bahraini Parliament.
He said Saudi soldiers, part of the 1000-strong contingent that entered  
Bahrain 
last month, had been seen by witnesses helping demolish Shia  mosques and 
shrines in the Sunni-ruled kingdom.
Mohammed Sadiq, of the Justice for Bahrain organisation, said the most  famous 
of the Shia shrines destroyed was that of a revered Bahraini Shia  spiritual 
leader, Sheikh Abdul Amir al-Jamri, who died in 2006. 

A photograph taken by activists shows the golden dome of the shrine  lying on 
the ground and later being taken away on the back of a truck.  On the walls of 
desecrated Shia mosques, graffiti has been scrawled  praising the Sunni King 
Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa and insulting the Shia. 

The attack on Shia places of worship has provoked a furious reaction  among the 
250 million Shia community, particularly in Iran and Iraq,  where Shia are in a 
majority, and in Lebanon where they are the largest  single community.
The Shia were already angry at the ferocious repression by Bahraini  security 
forces of the pro-democracy movement, which had sought to be  non-sectarian. 
After the monarchy had rejected meaningful reform, the  wholly Sunni army and 
security forces started to crush the largely Shia  protests on March 15 and 16.
The harshness of the government repression is provoking allegations of  
hypocrisy against Washington, London and Paris. Their mild response to  human 
rights abuses and the Saudi Arabian armed intervention in Bahrain  is in stark 
contrast to their vocal concern for civilians in Libya.
The US and Britain have avoided doing anything that would destabilise  Saudi 
Arabia and the Sunni monarchies in the Gulf, to which they are  allied.
They are worried about Iran taking advantage of the plight of fellow  Shia, 
although there is no evidence that Iran has any role in fomenting  protests 
despite Bahraini government claims to the contrary. The US has a  lot to lose 
because its Fifth Fleet, responsible for the Gulf and the  north of the Indian 
Ocean, is based in Bahrain.
Sunni-Shia hostility in the Muslim world is likely to deepen because of the 
demolition of Shia holy places in Bahrain. 

Shia leaders recall that it was the blowing up of the revered Shia  shrine of 
al-Askari in Samarra, Iraq, by al-Qaeda in 2006 that provoked a  sectarian 
civil 
war between Sunni and Shia in which tens of thousands  died. 

They see fundamentalist Wahhabi doctrine, upheld by the state in Saudi  Arabia, 
as being behind the latest sectarian assault and attempt to keep  the Shia as 
second-class citizens. 

Sadiq believes Saudi troops are behind the attacks on mosques and  shrines. 
"What is happening comes from the ideology of Wahhabism which  is against 
shrines," he said. To the Wahhabi, the Shia are as heretical  as Christians.
Aswad said soldiers in Saudi uniforms had been seen attending the destruction 
of 
Shia religious sites.
Yousif al-Khoei, who heads a Shia charitable foundation, said he could  
"confirm 
that reports of desecration of Shia graves, shrines and mosques  and 
hussainiyas 
[religious meeting houses] in Bahrain are genuine and  we are concerned that 
Saudi troops, who believe that shrines are  un-Islamic and are trying to 
enforce 
that Wahhabi doctrine on the Shia  of Bahrain, will undoubtedly result in 
heightened sectarian tensions".
Some 499 people in Bahrain are known to have been detained during the  current 
unrest and many are believed to have been tortured. Four who  died in detention 
this month showed signs of severe abuse and appeared  to have been beaten to 
death.
In the case of Ali Isa Ibrahim Saqer, who had turned himself in to the  
security 
forces after threats to detain his family if he did not do so,  photographs 
showed signs of whipping and beating.
The Bahraini human rights activist who photographed the body was later  
detained 
and accused of faking the picture, but the same injuries were  witnessed by the 
New York-based Human Rights Watch.
There are continuing arbitrary arrests of people who took part in the  
pro-democracy protests that began on February 14. Even waving a Bahraini  flag 
is considered an offence and a doctor who was shown on television  shedding 
tears over the body of a dead protester was detained.
The aim of government repression is evidently to terrorise the Shia and  
permanently crush the protest movement. Doctors who treated injured  
demonstrators have been arrested and, on April 15, the authorities  detained a 
lawyer, Mohammed al-Tajer, who defended protesters in court.  Human Rights 
Watch 
says the families of many of those detained have no  word on what has happened 
to them.
The authorities do not seem concerned about providing plausible accounts  of 
how 
detainees died. In the case of Saqer, who was detained on April 3  and whose 
body was released six days later, the Government said he had  "created chaos" 
in 
the detention centre and had died while it was being  quelled.
Human Rights Watch, which saw his body during the ritual before he was  buried 
in his home village of Sehla, said "his body showed signs of  severe physical 
abuse".
The fighting in Libya and unrest elsewhere in the Arab world has drawn  
attention away from Bahrain, and the authorities have also arrested  
pro-democracy journalists and prevented several foreign journalists  entering 
the country.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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