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bin Rashid, struggled to persuade the crowd to disperse but with little success and

                   from then on shots were heard being fired from the crowd, the police lost control


                   and fired back.  The report also specified that four people in total had died, three


                   arrived dead to the hospital, and one died later of his wounds.  Two British

                   volunteers donated blood for three of the wounded rioters thereby saving their


                   lives.  The Commission concluded that, although the crowds were in an ‘aggressive

                   and threatening mood’, the police should have used less lethal methods to disperse


                   of angry mobs. 199

                          At least three of the four fallen demonstrators lived outside of Manama and


                   three of the four were younger than twenty-one.  200   In this matter Burrows stated in

                   his monthly Residency report of the Arab Gulf States under British protection that in


                   memory of the four killed, photographs of the four were printed in Lebanon, around

                   1,500 copies, sold at one-eighth of a Rupee per copy to the locals. 201


                          In the Resident’s view, the Bahraini sectarian tensions should be attributed

                   to the general attitudes and regional tensions as ‘influence percolates even here


                   through the Egyptian press and the various Arab radio broadcasts’.  202   Following the

                   recent trouble the Adviser received a letter from the Ruler on 19 September








                   199  TNA, FO 371/109813, Commission of Enquiry Report.
                   200  The identities of the four fallen Bahrainis is as follows: Ebrahim Abdul-Rasool bin Saif, from
                   Manama, twenty years of age; Mohammed Al-Hajj Khadhem Al-Hajj Ali, from Al-Malikiya, twenty-one
                   years of age; Ali Ahmed Al-Saeed, from Muqaba, eighteen years of age; and Ali Al-Hajj Hassan Al-Hajj
                   Abdulla, from Sitra, twenty-nine years of age.  See ‘Akhar Uthu Qiyadi ala Qayid Al-Hayat min “Hayet
                   Al-Itihad Al-Watani”’ [The Last Alive Member of the “National Union Committee”], Al-Wasat, 12
                   October 2002, 2.
                   201  ‘Bernard Burrows, Residency’s Monthly Report for September 1954’, in Political Diaries of the
                   Persian Gulf, vol. 19 1951-1954, ed. R.L. Jarman (London: 1990), 1-6 (5).
                   202  TNA, FO 371/109813, Burrows to FO, 20 July 1954.


                   © Hamad E. Abdulla                        66
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