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Supporters
of Shiite leader Moqtada al-Sadr hold up a Bahraini flag
during a protest in
Baghdad (AFP, Ahmad al-Rubaye)
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BAGHDAD —
Thousands of Iraqis took to the streets of Baghdad and cities in the
Shiite-majority south of the country on Friday to condemn Bahrain for crushing
an uprising a year ago.
The
protests, organised by Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, took place in a
half-dozen cities in south Iraq with attendance ranging from dozens to several
thousand, AFP reporters said.
"The
Bahraini king is a king only to himself, not for the oppressed people of
Bahrain," Sadrist official Ibrahim al-Jabari said in a speech to thousands
of demonstrators in the movement's Sadr City bastion in north Baghdad.
Jabari also
criticised the Arab League for barring Syria from attending an upcoming summit
in Baghdad, but allowing Bahrain to join.
Protesters
shouted, "Bahrain! Free, Free Bahrain!" and held banners condemning
Saudi Arabia's "interference" in the Gulf monarchy.
Rallies
were also held in Sadr's headquarters town of Najaf, the southern port city of
Basra, and the towns of Nasiriyah, Hilla, Amara and Diwaniyah.
AFP
journalists said thousands of demonstrators attended the Najaf and Amara
protests, while hundreds took part in the Basra, Nasiriyah and Hilla rallies.
Diwaniyah, however, only say a few dozen protesters.
"All
of these protesters have come to say to the Bahraini leaders, 'Stop what you
are doing to the people of Bahrain'," said Mohaned al-Gharawi, a Sadrist
official taking part in the Najaf demonstration.
Bahrain has
complained to Iraq previously of Sadr's "irresponsible statements"
about the uprising, summoning Baghdad's envoy to Manama in January.
The
Shiite-led opposition in Bahrain demands constitutional changes that would
reduce the power of the ruling Sunni dynasty. Tensions have remained high in
Bahrain since a deadly crackdown last year after a month of street protests in
the capital Manama.
Tensions
between Iraq and the six Gulf Arab states have risen sharply since Bahrain
secured military support from fellow Gulf Cooperation Council members to smash
the month of pro-democracy protests.
In the
aftermath of the crackdown, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki warned that the
military intervention risked stoking sectarian conflict across the region.

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