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Posted by : A 23‏/11‏/2014

Bahraini protesters clash with riot police during a demonstration against the ongoing parliamentary elections in the village of Sanabis, west of Manama on November 22, 2014 (AFP Photo / Mohammed Al-Shaikh)

Sporadic clashes erupted all over the tiny island nation on Saturday where protesters have blocked roads in several towns to show their discontent with the country’s first parliamentary and municipal elections since a 2011 popular uprising.




Security forces responded with force firing tear gas and rubber bullet to disperse the protesters who attempted to block streets with burning tires.



The country's Shia opposition groups have dismissed the election as a “farce” and called for a vote that would include a candidate not affiliated with the ruling Sunni family.


READ MORE: Bahrain stages controversial elections amid Shia boycott


Bahrain’s biggest opposition party, Al-Wefaq, and others have boycotted the polls because of what they see as a lack of legitimacy. Before the vote, Al-Wefaq announced the regime’s failure to reach a political agreement with the opposition which could spark an “explosion” of violence.



The opposition groups have in turn held an anti-regime referendum, Tasnim News Agency reports.


“The referendum wants to send the international community the message that Bahrain could find a basic solution to the crisis and the 200-year-old problem,” Rashed al-Rashed, a leader of Bahrain’s February 14 movement told the agency earlier this week.



Since February 2011, numerous demonstrations in the streets of Bahrain have led to violence, as the Shia majority is calling for the Al-Khalifa royal family to give up power. The crackdown by the government has led to many allegations of human rights abuses, including torture











source RT - Daily news http://ift.tt/1raR9Hh

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