Thousands protest at Bahrain funeral

Thousands of Bahrainis chanted slogans against the Gulf state's king today at a funeral of a teenager who rights groups say died…

Thousands of Bahrainis chanted slogans against the Gulf state's king today at a funeral of a teenager who rights groups say died after being hit by a tear gas canister fired by police.

The government denied that police were responsible and offered a 10,000 dinar ($26,500) reward for information on Ali Jawad Ahmad's death.

"The coroner's report indicates that the markings on Ali's neck are not consistent with being hit with a tear gas canister or rubber bullet as some have claimed," the government said in a statement today.

About 10,000 marched at the 14-year-old boy's funeral, calling for the overthrow of King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa and the royal family in the small island state which crushed a pro-democracy movement earlier this year, a witness said.

READ MORE

The marchers, many of them in tears, shouted "Down with Hamad" and "Death to al-Khalifa" as they carried the Shia boy's body from his family's home to a cemetery, the witness said.

The crowd dispersed peacefully and there were no clashes with police forces.

Small-scale protests and clashes with security forces frequently break out in areas where the majority Shia Muslim population live after the Sunni-dominated government launched a widespread crackdown against anti-government protests.

Around 30 people were killed during the unrest.

Saudi and United Arab Emirates troops helped US-allied Bahrain stamp out protests it says were driven by Shia sectarian motivations and instigated by non-Arab Shi'ite power Iran across the Gulf. Opposition groups deny this.

Reuters