Dozens of people were reportedly injured in Bahrain early Friday, after police fired birdshot to disperse hundreds of anti-government protesters in several Shiite villages. A policeman was also wounded after being shot by a homemade gun.
The protests, which erupted late Thursday and lasted until the
early hours of Friday, were called by the opposition February 14
Coalition youth group, according to witnesses cited by AFP.
“We will remove you [King] Hamad,” was reportedly the
banner slogan issued by the group to rally protesters against the
Sunni monarch.
Activists said that dozens were injured in clashes as police responded to protests by firing birdshot. Meanwhile, the Bahraini Ministry of Interior posted on Twitter that “security forces confronted a terror group” near Manama, and that a policeman was wounded after being shot with a homemade gun. AFP quoted witnesses confirming both the police fire and the shooting, but said that an official list of casualties was not immediately available.
Demonstrators have repeatedly clashed with security forces since
the start of protests against the Sunni dynasty. The
demonstrations have not ceased, despite a 2011 crackdown backed
by Saudi-led Gulf troops.
The Bahraini government has often referred to protesters – mostly
Shiite Muslims - as “terrorists,” and recently used a car bomb
explosion outside a Sunni mosque as a pretext to ban the
opposition protests in several Shiite villages.
At least 80 people have been killed in Bahrain since the uprising
began, according to the International Federation for Human
Rights.