According to Shai leaders they are excluded from top government jobs and from key ministries, including defense and interior affairs. Only 13 percent of senior state posts are held by Shias, down from 25 percent in 2001, the human- rights center report said.
Bahrain’s chief of public security Major-General Abdul Latif Rashed al-Zayani denied any discrimination and said government employees are not classified by religious affiliation.
While Shias can’t get the good jobs, immigrant laborers from India and other south Asian countries do most of the unskilled work. They are paid as little as $260 a month.
A short drive from the gleaming office towers of Manama, Said Abdullah, a Shia carpenter, lives in a dilapidated concrete apartment building with his wife and four children.
The plywood roof leaks when it rains in winter and his teenage boy and three younger daughters have to sleep in one room. Abdullah says he can’t get work in the army or police and struggles on pay of $530 a month.
“If you come from a shia area, you have no chance,” he said.
Security Chief Al-Zayani said only 100 to 200 youths have been involved in regular disturbances, describing them as “a radical minority.”
“We hope that with the amnesty they will come to their senses and join other forces in properly expressing their views,” he said.
Shia legislators say they are frustrated. They boycotted the assembly from 2002 to 2006, then returned because the king persuaded them to give the political system a chance to work.
“It’s the third year now; in truth we can’t move anything,” said Abdul Hussain Al-Mutghawi of Shia al-Wifaq. It is the largest single party.
Shia leader Mushaima warns that patience is running out. The al-Khalifa family has ruled the country since invading the Persian province in 1783.
“We are the original citizens, we deserve full rights,” he said. “The problems will start again and they will be more violent, because people are angry and upset. There is an explosion coming.”
In January, youths rioted and burned tires almost nightly for three months after the arrest of three Shia leaders. On April 30, a homemade explosive device went off accidentally in a car outside Manama, the capital, killing one Shia and injuring another. Police said it resembled bombs seized during the riots.
“The country is not stable,” Nabeel Rajab, president of the Bahrain Human Rights Center, said in an interview in Manama. “Stability won’t come until human rights are respected. The existing policy of the ruling elite is pushing the country into conflict.”
The riots stopped after al-Khalifa, 59, on April 11 released 178 Shias detained on security charges. They included Shias community leader Hassan Mushaima, cleric Mohammed al- Moqdad and 33 others arrested in late January on charges of plotting terrorist attacks and seeking to overthrow the government.
The releases won’t remove the risk of violence in the Gulf financial center as long as the government quells protests and the parliamentary system is unrepresentative, Shia leaders and human-rights activists in Manama say.
Though Shias are a majority of the population, their party holds 17 of the 40 seats in the legislature, which can only pass laws with the assent of an upper chamber whose members are chosen by the king.
The instability in Bahrain is a concern for the U.S. Mushaima says Shia opposition to the presence of the Fifth Fleet is growing because of U.S. support for the Al-Khalifa government.
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