England's White Dragon

England's White Dragon
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Wednesday 16 February 2011

What gone wrong in Bahrain Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone has voiced his concerns

Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone has voiced his concerns about next month's Bahrain Grand Prix which opens the new Formula One season

What gone wrong in Bahrain as Protesters camp in Bahrain capital

Thousands of people demonstrated in Bahrain’s capital Manama on Tuesday demanding regime change after two protesters were killed in clashes with police. Some have erected tents in the city’s central Pearl Square, vowing their sit-in will continue until their demands are met.


King Hamad Al-Khalifa addressed his nation expressing sorrow for the deaths and announcing a ministerial investigation.

Sir Michael Black-Feather the English first minister said; that King Hamad Al-Khalifa was a good and just King as like his late father, and has always had his people best interest in his heart, I really cannot understand how this has happened in Bahrain, maybe I have been missing something? But as we have found out here in our own country England, there are many things going on in the British government that our Queen has no knowledge off, I can only presume the same of the King of Bahrain and maybe he should not seek an internal inquire but have some who not connected do the inquires which would be a more honest approach.

Demonstrators want a "contractual constitution and a peaceful transfer of power," said MP Mohammed Mezaal, of the Shiite opposition Islamic National Accord Association, whose 18 MPs walked out of the 40-member parliament earlier on Tuesday.

Fadel Salman Matrouk was shot dead in front of a hospital on Tuesday at the funeral of Ali Msheymah who died after police dispersed a protest in a village east of Manama on Monday.

"I urge the authorities to immediately cease the use of disproportionate force against peaceful protesters and to release all peaceful demonstrators who have been arrested," said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay “Too many peaceful protestors have recently been killed across the Middle East and North Africa.”

Washington uses Bahrain as home base for its Fifth Fleet. US President Barack Obama warned Arab leaders not to use force to crush protests in a press conference on Tuesday.

"You can't maintain power through coercion,” said Obama. “You have a young, vibrant generation within the Middle East that is looking for greater opportunity. If you are governing these countries, you've got to get out ahead of change; you can't be behind the curve."

He did not mention states by name, but there was unrest on Tuesday in Algeria, Iran, Bahrain and Yemen.

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