Protesters in Bahrain won a symbolic victory on Saturday, Libyan security forces opened fire to disperse mourners and a new party was approved in Egypt as the uprisings sweeping the Arab world challenged its rulers.
Unrest has spread from Tunisia and Egypt to Bahrain, Libya, Yemen and Djibouti, as people of country after country lose their fear of oppressive, autocratic rulers and take to the streets demanding democratic change and economic opportunity.
Anti-government protests met varying degrees of force in Yemen, Algiers and Djibouti, while an Egyptian court approved a new party in a landmark ruling. Saudi authorities detained activists trying to set up the kingdom’s first political party.
In Bahrain, a key United States ally and home to the US Fifth Fleet, thousands of protesters celebrated as they poured into Pearl Square in Manama, after riot police hurriedly pulled out of the symbolically important traffic circle.
The crown prince, charged by King Hamad on Friday with opening a dialogue with protesters, called for a national day of mourning for the six people killed in this week’s protests, and appealed for calm.
He earlier had announced that all troops had been ordered off the streets — meeting one of the conditions for talks spelt out by an ex-lawmaker of the main Shi’ite opposition bloc Wefaq.
Ibrahim Mattar told Reuters the authorities must accept the concept of constitutional monarchy and pull troops off the streets before a dialogue could begin. “Then we can go for a temporary government of new faces that would not include the current interior or defence ministers,” he said.
The Sunni Muslim Al Khalifa dynasty rules Bahrain, but the Shi’ite majority has long complained about what it sees as discrimination in access to state jobs, housing and healthcare.
The United States and top oil producer Saudi Arabia see Bahrain as a Sunni bulwark against neighbouring Shi’ite regional power Iran.
In Libya, security forces in the eastern city of Benghazi fired in the air to disperse a crowd mourning the dozens of protesters killed in the worst unrest of Moammar Gadaffi’s four decades in power.
Human Rights Watch said 35 people were killed in the city late on Friday, adding to dozens who had already died in a fierce crackdown on three days of protests against Gadaffi’s rule, inspired by the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt.
A security source said clashes were still under way in the region between Benghazi and Al Bayda, 200km away, adding that many police stations had been damaged or set on fire.
New York-based Human Rights Watch said Friday’s killings took to 84 its estimated death toll in three days of protests, mostly around Benghazi, against a ruling elite accused of hoarding Libya’s oil wealth and denying political freedoms.
The Benghazi-based newspaper Quryna said 24 people were killed in the city on Friday, shot when security forces fired to stop protesters attacking the police headquarters and a military building where weapons were stored.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague urged Libya to stop using force against protesters and asked Middle East governments to respond to the “legitimate aspirations” of their people.
“I condemn the violence in Libya, including reports of the use of heavy weapons fire and a unit of snipers against demonstrators,” Hague said in a statement. “This is clearly unacceptable and horrifying.”
The spreading unrest, close to the world’s biggest oil producer Saudi Arabia, helped drive Brent crude prices higher this week before other factors caused them to slip on Friday.
It also was a factor in gold prices posting their best weekly performance since December.
Analysts say that Gadaffi, unlike the Egyptian leadership, has oil cash to smooth over social problems, and is respected in much of the country, which remains calm.
Noman Benotman, a former dissident Islamist based, told Reuters the government was talking to tribal leaders in Benghazi to try to defuse tension. But he said that if the authorities decided to restore order by force it would be done “toughly”.
In Egypt, a court approved the Wasat Party (Centre Party), the first new party to be recognised since President Hosni Mubarak was overthrown last month, and an official said there would soon be a limited cabinet reshuffle.
The Wasat Party will be able to contest elections the military has promised within six months, and its founder, A¦bou Elela Mady, said it had been powered by “the winds of freedom that blew with the revolution”.
In Saudi Arabia, on the other hand, several Islamists and opposition activists who tried to launch a political party in a rare challenge to authority, have been detained, rights activists said.
“At a time when people throughout the Arab world are out on the street seeking greater freedom, the Saudi secret police seem determined to nip any similar demands in the bud,” Christoph Wilcke, senior Middle East researcher at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement.
Saudi Arabia is an absolute monarchy that does not tolerate dissent and has no elected parliament and no political parties.
In Yemen, one protester was killed and seven were hurt in clashes with supporters of President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sanaa, a day after five people died in clashes between security forces and crowds demanding an end to Saleh’s 32-year rule.
Saleh, a US ally against a Yemen-based al-Qaeda wing that has launched attacks at home and abroad, is struggling to end month-old protests flaring across the impoverished country.
In Algiers, police in riot gear crammed about 500 protesters into the courtyard of a residential block before they could reach May 1 Square in the city centre to start a banned march.
The main opposition parties did not take part in the demonstration for democratic change and better economic conditions. It was too small to rattle the authorities, but there are signs that pressure for change is building within the ruling group, including a new government line-up.
Al-Jazeera television, whose coverage of the current unrest is widely watched in the Arab world, said it was investigating reports of reception disruptions across the Middle East, a day after it said its signal had been jammed on several frequencies.
The uprisings sweeping through the region have also reached the tiny Horn of Africa state of Djibouti, where three leading opposition politicians were detained on Saturday in a move to quash anti-government protests.
Earlier, a crowd demanding the removal of President Ismail Omar Guelleh clashed with security forces for the second day running and was dispersed with teargas. Guelleh took office in 1999 and is expected to run for a third term in April 2011.
Djibouti, a former French colony between Eritrea and Somalia, hosts France’s largest military base in Africa and a major US base. Its port is used by foreign navies patrolling busy shipping lanes off the coast of Somalia to fight piracy. Unemployment runs at about 60 percent. – Reuters