Formula One Live Blog

 

About 15,000 people turned up for the funeral of Salah Abbas Habib, the Bahraini youth killed a day before Formula One Grand Prix, a witness has told Reuters news agency.

After the ceremony, hundreds of protesters threw petrol bombs and stones at a police station in the district of al-Bilad al-Qadeem in the capital Manama. Police fired teargas and sound grenades.

His brother told Reuters before the funeral that a coroner's report had concluded that Habib died of birdshot wounds to the chest and abdomen.

 

Bahrain's highest appeals court on Monday postponed for a week the final verdict in the case of 21 democracy activists convicted of plotting to overthrow the kingdom's rulers.

The court set the next hearing for April 30 amid claims by the family of hunger striker Abdulhadi al-Khawaja that his health is in sharp decline nearly 11 weeks into his protest.

Bahrain officials insist al-Khawaja faces no immediate medical risks.

On Sunday, a representative from Bahrain's public prosecution said Khawaja's doctors assured him that the Shia activist "is in good and stable health and is getting all necessary medical care".

The postponement came amid escalating tensions in the Sunni-ruled kingdom after a week of near-daily anti-government protests that coincided with Sunday's controversial Formula One Grand Prix race.

Witnesses said the courthouse was cordoned off by security forces as the postponement was announced in an effort by the government to prevent a planned protest by the largest Shia opposition group, Al-Wefaq.

A team of journalists for Britain's Channel 4 News was released on Sunday after being detained while covering Bahrain's Grand Prix race, which went ahead after a week of angry protests away from the track, AFP news agency reported.

Foreign affairs correspondent Jonathan Miller wrote on microblogging site Twitter that he and his crew had been released and were being deported, but that his Bahraini driver and an activist who was travelling with them were still being held.

Security forces told the Channel 4 team that the pair would be released soon.

Miller and his team were arrested while reporting from a village in Bahrain after the race, a Channel 4 News spokesman said.

Al Jazeera's special correspondent in Bahrain, who cannot be named for security reasons, reports that the situation in the villages outside Manama "is already shaping up to be a tense night"on the evening following the Bahrain Grand Prix.

Our correspondent also reports on a press conference organised by the al Wefaq party with the family of Salah Abbas Habib, the protester whose body had been found on a rooftop on the eve of the race.

 

London-based  British-Kurdish writer, Ruwadya Mustafah, says opposition activist Ala'a Shehabi was arrested this afternoon for "showing journalists around" in Bahrain.

A Bahraini blogger tweets that there have been shootings in the villages outside the capital, Manama.

RuwaydaMustafah

LuluAvenue

Amy Lawson, head of communication for ITN's Channel 4 News, has reported that a news team from the British broadcaster has arrested in Bahrain.

Ben De Pear, Head of foreign news at Channel 4, has tweeted that the Channel 4 team was surrounded by masked men when their driver was taken away separately.

amyllawson

amyllawson

amyllawson

Al Jazeera's correspondent in Bahrain, who cannot be named for security reasons, says the family of  protester, Salah Abbas Habib, whose body was found on the roof of a building on the eve of the Grand Prix, has not been returned to them.

The Bahrain Human Rights Centre says the body of Habib is not being returned to his family due to today's Formula One race, our correspondent reports.

AJUnderCover

AJUnderCover

AJUnderCover

Picture from twitter user @mhsaeed86 of a candle light vigil in the Bahraini village of Shakhurah.

Protesters, according to Mohamed Saeed, are chanting "two people ruined the country, Khalifa and tyrant Hamad" referring to King Hamad bin Isa al Khalifa, current monarch of the Gulf kingdom.

Mansoor al Jamri, editor of the independent Al Wasat newspaper in Bahrain tells Al Jazeera that the Formula One will be a "milestone in the history of the events that we have been going through since last year".

Jamri goes on to say that the problem in Bahrain is not a matter of security, rather "the problem is about political demands ... stopping the divisive policies, the discrimination".

 

Speaking to reporters after the race, Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One CEO, has said the Bahrain Grand Prix will remain on the Formula One calendar for the foreseeable future.

Of demonstrations calling for the cancellation of the event in the Gulf kingdom, Ecclestone said: "I think it's good because people talk about things, you know. You know what they say - there is no such thing as bad publicity".

Bahrain owns half of the McLaren Group, the parent of the British-based Formula One team, reports the Reuters news agency.

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