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                                        Volume. 11671

Clashes in Bahrain as protesters mark anniversary
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c_330_235_16777215_0___images_stories_edim_01_bahrain(33).jpgMANAMA (AP) — Thousands of anti-government protesters threw firebombs and stones at riot police and burned tires in Bahrain on the second anniversary of the intervention by a Saudi-led force in the Persian Gulf island's crisis.
The clashes were the worst in several weeks and served a reminder that there are elements of the opposition that have yet to buy into slow-moving talks with government officials.
 
Police fired stun grenades at the demonstrators during the clashes in the mainly Shia neighborhoods surrounding the capital, Manama. Starting early in the morning, the mostly young demonstrators blocked roads leading into scores of Shia villages to prevent security forces from entering.
 
The main opposition group, Al Wefaq, said 35 protesters were wounded in the clashes, including three critically, in what it called a "systematic policy carried out under high, official orders to use violence against peaceful pro-democracy protesters."
It also accused police of using live ammunition and bird shot against some protesters.
 
"This is unforgettable day," said Maki Ali, an 18-year-old demonstrator from Bilad Al Qadeem, west of the capital. "I remember well how the Saudis with United Arab Emirates intervened in my country's internal affairs. They supported the government killing."
 
Saudi and other Persian Gulf troops were deployed in Bahrain to help the Western-backed Sunni monarchy quell a wave of anti-government protests demanding a greater role for the country's Shia majority.
 
Ameena Mohamed Hussain, a 21-year-old from the village of Diah, said she still carried a lot of anger from that day two years ago. More than 60 people were killed in more than two years of unrest inspired by the Arab Spring.
"This government doesn't hear our voices and I can't forgive what the troops did in my country," she said. "They supported our evil government."

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