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  2. 2011 Bahraini uprising - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Bahraini_uprising

    The Bahrain government attempted to block information from citizen reporters and sites used by protesters. The Bahrain Centre for Human Rights said that Bahraini authorities were blocking a Facebook group being used for planned protests on 14 February, and that its own website had been blocked for many years. [335]

  3. Day of Rage (Bahrain) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Day_of_Rage_(Bahrain)

    A Facebook page calling for a popular revolution on 14 February. Inspired by the successful uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia, [1] opposition activists began in January to post on a large scale to the social media websites Facebook and Twitter and online forums, and to send e-mails and text messages with calls to stage major pro-democracy protests.

  4. Aftermath of the Bahraini uprising (July–December 2011)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aftermath_of_the_Bahraini...

    Al Jazeera English released a fifty-minute documentary film about the Bahraini uprising entitled Bahrain: Shouting in the Dark, which highlights continuing anti-government protests by Bahraini Shias and shows how Facebook was used to target pro-democracy activists – "unmasking Shia traitors" – and catalogues human rights abuses by the regime.

  5. February 14 Youth Coalition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/February_14_Youth_Coalition

    Coalition Youth of 14 Feb Revolution (Arabic: إئتلاف شباب ثورة 14 فبراير), sometimes called The Coalition (Arabic: الإئتلاف) is a Bahraini youth group, named after the date of the beginning of Bahrain's uprising, and led by anonymous individuals who organize protests chiefly via new-media sites. [1]

  6. Internet censorship in the Arab Spring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_censorship_in_the...

    In Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, bloggers and "netizens" were arrested and some are alleged to have been killed. The developments since the beginning of the Arab Spring in 2010 have raised the issue of Internet access as a human right and have revealed the type of power certain authoritarian governments retain over the people and the Internet.

  7. Social media's role in the Arab Spring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_media's_role_in_the...

    In the aftermath of the Tunisian Revolution, young Egyptians spread the call to protest online with the help of a Facebook campaign, "We Are All Khaled Said", organized by the April 6 Youth Movement, Egypt's "largest and most active online human-right activist group". [11] As the call to protest spread, online dissent moved into the offline world.

  8. Israel opens Bahrain embassy, three years after ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/israel-opens-bahrain-embassy...

    Israel officially opened its embassy in Bahrain on Monday, three years after both sides normalised ties and as Washington presses Riyadh for a similar deal that would be Israel's biggest ...

  9. Timeline of the 2011 Bahraini uprising - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_2011...

    On 21 February, the Bahrain News Agency, a branch of Bahrain's Ministry of Culture and Information, claimed that 300,000 Bahraini residents (more than fifty percent of the local population; Bahrain local population is 568,000), [23] has gathered in the grounds opposite Al Fateh Mosque in Manama to support the ruling monarchy. [24]