By Rannie Amiri 
While the United States was preparing to sign a multi-billion dollar arms 
deal with Saudi Arabia, royal forces laid siege to al-Awamiya, a restive
 town of approximately 30,000 in the Qatif district of the country’s 
Eastern Province. Bulldozers, backed by armored tanks and helicopter 
gunships, systemically leveled homes and put entire families on the 
street in the historic Mosawara neighborhood.
 This came under the guise of a development and "renovation" project for
 the long-neglected and impoverished city although the regime saw fit to
 post doctored images of allegedly captured weapons to imply was also a security operation.
Last month, anticipating such a move, United Nations experts on 
poverty, culture and housing rights, " … called on the Government of the
 Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to immediately halt the planned demolition of a
 400-year-old walled neighborhood in the village of Awamia. The UN 
experts warned the development plan for the Al-Masora quarter threatens 
the historical and cultural heritage of the town with irreparable harm, 
and may result in the forced eviction of numerous people from their 
businesses and residences. 
"The area is of importance not only to local people and the entire 
cultural landscape of Awamia, but also has national significance for the
 history and cultural heritage of Saudi Arabia," said the UN Special 
Rapporteur in the field of cultural rights, Karima Bennoune. "The 
planned demolition would erase this unique regional heritage in an 
irreversible manner."
 As the report makes clear, the project did not provide for the 
construction of residential buildings in place of those destroyed.
Awamiya was home to the late Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, the fiery cleric 
who nonetheless peacefully demanded equal rights for the marginalized, 
oppressed Saudi Shia community. He was ultimately executed by the 
government in January 2016 after his capture in July 2012. Awamiya is no
 stranger to aggression, but this past week’s attack and ongoing siege 
is a new escalation by those yet to be satiated by the killing of Sheikh
 al-Nimr.
The city’s planned "development" was marked by blocking ambulance 
access, cordoning off entrance to Mosawara with concrete barriers, 
cutting power and shooting at residents. As one said, "It is really 
painful to demolish a historic and archaeological city like Almosara 
whose lifespan extends for hundreds of years. Some people who want to 
close their eyes to the truth and are not affected by the demolition 
will believe in the lie of development."
The action comes on the heels of an interview by deputy Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman’s interview
 on state television in which he vowed to take the country’s standoff 
with Tehran inside of Iran’s borders. The offensive was still against 
Shia Muslims but instead within Saudi borders and the victims his fellow
 citizens. 
 It is erroneous and somewhat simplistic to frame the assault strictly
 in sectarian terms or as a move to appease the religious 
establishment’s anti-Shia proclivities.  Rather, it was meant to send a 
message to all in the Kingdom of the fate of those who would oppose the 
authority and the legitimacy of the monarchy. It was to widen the narrow
 streets of Mosawara to allow tanks easy passage for future operations. 
It was a reminder to those in the Qatif who might still be emboldened by
 Sheikh Nimr’s famous declaration, "A century of oppression … enough, we
 will not be silent and we will not fear. We will call for separation 
even from this country and let be what will be. Our dignity is dearer 
than the unity of this land."
Most importantly, it was to demonstrate that even when the President 
of the United States visits Saudi Arabia to speak about combating 
extremism, the regime itself can be extremist without consequence or 
reproach. 
Yemeni towns have been the subject of an endless bombing campaign at the hands 
  of the Saudi government resulting in mass casualties, widespread destruction 
  of civilian infrastructure and rampant malnutrition. Poor villages outside of 
  Manama, Bahrain have withered under the pervasive repression of their allies, 
  the al-Khalifa dynasty. Now another has joined their ranks.
 
Rannie Amiri is an independent commentator on Middle East affairs. 
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