National Union Committee

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NUC members in 1954, L-R (back): Alaiwat, Bin Mousa, Al Bakir, Fakhro, Shamlan; (front): Al Tajir, Abudeeb, Kamaluddin

The National Union Committee (

British colonial influence (through the removal of Charles Belgrave
), and an end to sectarianism.

The original committee was made up of four Sunni representatives and four Shi'i representatives.[2] The members were:

One of the early members of the committee was Ali Sayyar, who joined in 1956 and would become a veteran journalist in Bahrain.[3]

Arrest and deportation

The NUC successfully orchestrated a number of general strikes and demonstrations in the country to push for its demands. In March 1956, British

Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd
was visiting Bahrain. Crowds of protesters lined the streets to shout anti-British slogans and threw sand at stones at the Foreign Secretary's entourage. A number of crew members, including a stewardess, were left injured. Abdulrahman Al Bakir, the secretary of the NUC, was among the leaders of the demonstrations. He was asked to leave the country after the incident for an extended stay abroad, and departed to Egypt. Al Bakir returned to Bahrain September 1956.

In October 1956, the NUC called for strikes and demonstrations against the Israeli-Anglo-French attack on

Al Khalifa family) tried the men and found them guilty. They were sentenced to 14 years at a prison located outside of Bahrain, in Saint Helena
.

In June 1961 the three prisoners were released from Saint Helena after a successful habeas corpus action, and were later paid financial compensation from the British government.

See also

References

  1. ^ Toby Matthiesen (2014). "Migration, Minorities, and Radical Networks: Labour Movements and Opposition Groups in Saudi Arabia, 1950–1975". International Review of Social History. 59 (3).
  2. JSTOR 4323106
    .
  3. .