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The Week That Was in Bahrain

Categories: Middle East & North Africa, Bahrain, Israel, Lebanon, Palestine, Breaking News, Disaster, Economics & Business, Environment, Politics, War & Conflict, Youth

With the Middle East literally on fire, Bahrain bloggers have naturally turned their attention to reporting and commenting on the latest tensions in the region.

The most comprehensive and ‘juicy’ stories, backed with videos and voice clips, are found at Haitham Sabbah's [1] blog, who is battling two fronts, reporting to us the latest atrocities on civilians in both Palestine and Lebanon.

A cleverly compiled post entitled “Did you know [2]“, gives us a chilling insight to issues, one never imagined could happen in this day and age.

“Did you know that 87 percent of Lebanese support Hizbullah’s fight with Israel, a rise of 29 percent on a similar poll conducted in February. More striking, however, is the level of support for Hizbullah’s resistance from non-Shiite communities. Eighty percent of Christians polled supported Hizbullah along with 80 percent of Druze and 89 percent of Sunnis,” writes Sabbah.

Well, if you didn't, now you know!

In another post this week, Sabbah shows us how Hizbullah not only has the Lebanese rallying behind it today, but also British MP George Galloway [3], who announced to a cheering crowd, that Hizbullah was “never a terrorist organisation [4].”

For the faint of heart, the blog is flagged with a slide show, featuring graphic photographs of this war's latest victims – innocent children whose lives were snatched before their parents’ very eyes, with most of the ‘civilised’ world sitting back and watching [5] the terror without even lifting a finger.

Like it or not, this gruesome presentation of maimed bodies, speaks volumes at a ‘visually-prejuidiced’ age where a photograph speaks a 1,000 words.

And why are all those children dying, you may ask? Silly Bahraini Girl [6] found the answer in an article she posted on her blog entitled Blood in Beirut: $75.05 a Barrel [7].

That is cheap.. but not as cheap as the Saudi donation to Lebanon, which Mohammed Al Maskati describes as pocket change [8].

“Saudi Arabia on Sunday donated $50 million to Lebanon….Let’s carry out some math here, since the Lebanese-Israeli conflict raised earlier the past oil prices sky-rocketed the per barrel intra-day for September delivery hit a new high of $78.18 on the ICE Futures Exchange in London yesterday (I came across reports that expected oil touching the barrier of the $85 by the end of summer) from an earlier $74 this pass week, multiply that by the Saudi crude oil production capacity of around 10.5-11.0 million bbl/d,” writes Al Maskati.

In another post, Al Maskati aptly sums up his feelings of disgust at the state of sudden “dumbness” which has gripped the Arab world [9]:

“The Arabian Silence: Not surprisingly the Arab coward regimes stood still to witness the butchery of the Lebanese people, the amazing silence still manages to capture my attention. Hezbolla doesn’t need money or artillery but we Arabs still fail to even support them sensitively,” he writes.

To shed light on Al Maskati's state of confusion, Manama Republic [10] explains:

“Turning-in the other cheek is best left to Arabs.

“Speaking of which, one chosen newspaper of the chosen people may have been truthful in reporting that a leading Arab leader had called a Chosen Prime Minister to urge him to keep up the good work. The speed by which the normally lethargic Larger Kingdom reacted to the break of hostilities is both bewildering and suggestive. It is either a new found Washingtonian efficiency -in the person of Prince Bandar- has inched closer to the ears of his uncles than originally thought, or that the text was readied a long time beforehand.”

Food for thought??