MANAMA,
May 27 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – A fight between five U.S.
soldiers and Bahraini citizens Sunday, May 27, turned into an
anti-U.S. demonstration in the capital Manama.
The
fight started with an argument between Rabab Said, a Bahraini woman
owner of a ladies’-wear store and an Ethiopian female customer in a
suburb northeast of Manama, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Five U.S. soldiers in civilian clothes then sided with the Ethiopian
woman.
Said
told AFP the American soldiers harassed her as well as her sister, in
addition to trying to assault her Indian chauffeur just in front of
two Bahraini policemen who did not try to help her in any way.
The
fight caught the attention of some Bahraini youths who interfered and
backed the Bahraini woman up and a violent fight broke out between
them and the U.S. soldiers.
More
Bahrainis joined the fight against the Americans who called for more
Bahraini policemen to help them, AFP said.
The
fight turned into a demonstration when more people joined in and
protested U.S. presence in Bahrain as well as Bahraini policemen’s
inaction in the fight.
Protestors
demanded U.S. forces out of Bahrain, where the U.S. Fifth Fleet is
stationed.
Meanwhile,
the Bahraini police refused to comment on the fight, while neither
officials from U.S. embassy in Bahrain nor Bahraini officials could be
reached for comments.
Many
demonstrations broke out in Bahrain in April 2002 protesting U.S.
policy in support of continued Israeli incursions into autonomous
Palestinian towns. There were numerous calls, moreover, to boycott
American products.