Arrests follow fresh Bahrain violence

Police and protesters clash in a Shia village of Daih at the funeral of a teenager in killed earlier in the week.

Bahrain
Fresh protests are expected to be held on Saturday after the funeral of a protester [Reuters]

Clashes have broken out on at the funeral  of a teenager killed in demonstrations to mark the second anniversary of
Bahrain’s Shia-led uprising, with police firing tear gas to disperse  mourners, witnesses said.

The security forces blocked access to the funeral of Hussein al-Jaziri in the Shia-populated village of Daih near the capital Manama on Saturday, firing tear gas and stun grenades to disperse dozens of people trying to push their way through.

The opposition said  al-Jaziri was killed in clashes between police and activists earlier this week.

The unrest began on Friday when protesters blocked a highway linking a number of of predominantly Shia villages with Manama.

Four people were arrested in after an overnight attack on security forces that wounded four policemen, including an officer, authorities say.

The interior ministry said in a statement on Saturday that it had “arrested four terrorists possessing weapons with which they had fired on security forces in Karzakan”, a village southwest of Manama.

A police officer and three policemen were taken to hospital after being wounded “by buckshot fired by a terrorist group”, Tarek al-Hassan, police chief,  said in statement.

The security forces “had to respond to the attack to defend themselves”, Hassan added, without giving further details of the attack or the police response.

Bomb defused

In another development, police said they found a bomb planted on a busy causeway linking Bahrain to Saudi Arabia.

The 2kg bomb was discovered on Thursday near a mosque on the Bahraini end of the route, used by thousands of people a day, and was safely defused, the information ministry said on Saturday.

Protests against the kingdom’s monarchy and government have stepped up since Thursday, and violence associated with the demonstrations has led to the deaths of the 16-year-old protester and a police officer.

Bahrain has seen two years of political upheaval linked to opposition demands for a real constitutional monarchy, with the unrest claiming at least 80 lives, according to international rights groups.

Clashes raged sporadically in Shia Muslim villages through the night and into the early hours of Friday.

The latest unrest comes amid a fresh round of a national dialogue between opposition groups and the government.

Source: News Agencies