RIYADH, Saudi Arabia: Big protests were held in oil-rich
mominin-dominated eastern region of Saudi Arabia after Saudi religious
police’s several aggressive attacks against Shiite pilgrims in the
holy city of Medinah this week.
Protestors were chanting ‘Labbayk Ya Baqee’, ‘we will not bend in
front of anyone save Allah’ and many others.

Shiites routinely complain of discrimination. Outspoken Shiite critics
have been jailed, and many Shiites claim to have been banned from such
jobs as the religious police and teaching religion classes.
According to reports the first clash took place Friday evening
February 20 after religious police filmed female Shiite pilgrims
outside the al-Baqee Cemetery in Medina, which contains the graves of
revered imams i.e. Al-Imam al-Hasan Al-Mojtaba, Al-Imam Zein Al-Abidein,
Al-Imam Al-Baqir and Al-Imam As-Sadeq (peace be on them). The women
were performing rituals.




Shiite pilgrims to al-Baqee Cemetery usually grab a handful of dust as
a blessing and pray at the graves of the imams, actions rejected as
inappropriate "innovations" by the puritanical Wahhabi interpretation
of Islam.
The official said such "infractions" always take place at al-Baqee and
are dealt with quietly by asking the pilgrims to refrain from
performing the rituals.
When five male relatives of the women demanded the police turn over
the tapes, there was a scuffle and the men were arrested.


Afterward, thousands of pilgrims gathered outside the cemetery,
demanding their release. Riot police used batons to disperse the
crowd, said witnesses.
On Monday night, another confrontation took place when the religious
police banned female Shiite pilgrims from visiting an area reserved
for them outside the cemetery overlooking the graves. In Saudi Arabia,
all women are banned from visiting cemeteries so special viewing areas
are created for them.
Witnesses said police used batons against the angry Shiite crowd,
which was estimated at 3,000-4,000.


On Tuesday, thousands of pilgrims after performing pilgrimage to Al-Baqee
cemetery entered the holy shrine of Prophet Muhammad (peace be on him
and his holy progeny) marking his death anniversary that falls on
Safar 28.
At once, they saw that more than one hundred personnel of religious
police coming towards them with worshippers’ sandals, shoes, chairs as
well as batons in their hands.
Keeping in view the sanctity of the place – (prophet mosque and his
shrine), the pilgrims tried to go out the shrine but the police beat
everyone who tried to step out.
Many pilgrims were wounded with knives.


The Al-Madina newspaper on Tuesday quoted Medina's governor, Prince
Abdul-Aziz bin Majed, as saying that authorities are questioning
"those behind the chaotic events" in al-Baqee. He did not elaborate.
Yasser al-Matrafi, head of public relations at the Commission for the
Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice which runs the
religious police, told Al-Madina that the religious police had no part
in al-Baqee events.