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International News Title: More than 800 injured in Bahrain political clashes MANAMA, Bahrain Hundreds of people were injured in violent clashes Sunday between protesters and armed civilians backed by police in this small island nation. The latest violence came after a month of protests led by the Shiite majority to demand sweeping political reforms and possibly the ouster of the nation's Western-allied Sunni monarchy. The government's Ministry of Interior said in a statement that protest camp tents from near the harbor were "removed." The statement said attempts by uniformed police officers to persuade the protesters to re-open a road reached an impasse and that a group of protesters attacked unarmed police officers. Police then sought to disperse approximately 350 protesters by using tear gas in order to clear the road, the statement said. Sayed Hadi Almoosawi, a leader of the Alwefaq opposition group, said police and anti-riot squads stationed near the harbor also fired rubber bullets. Clashes also were reported at the University of Bahrain in Sakheer South Bahrain. The school then announced it will stop lectures in the campus until further notice. In all, more than 800 people were injured, four of them critically, said Ahmad Alumran of Salmaniya hospital. This latest protests came a day after America's defense secretary said he's "convinced" that Bahrain's royal leaders are "serious about real reform and moving forward," but emphasized that they must move quickly. Defense Secretary Robert Gates was visiting the restive and strategically important island kingdom, where he huddled with King Hamad and Crown Prince Salman and talked about the importance of engaging with opposition forces. "I think that the concern now is that it's important that they have somebody to talk to and that the opposition be willing to sit down with the government and carry this process forward," Gates said. Bahrain, which sits in the Persian Gulf and is the base of the U.S. Fifth Fleet, has been wracked by anti-government protests since mid-February. Elsewhere Sunday: In the oil town of Benghazi, Libya, Moammar Gadhafi's forces drove rebel fighters into the desert with waves of artillery fire and airstrikes. In Beirut, tens of thousands of supporters of the pro-Western opposition rallied, demanding that the Iranian-backed militant group Hezbollah give up its weapons. In Sanaa, Yemen, police on rooftops fired live bullets and tear gas at protesters, wounding at least 100 people camping out near Sanaa University. The day's violence, which also left one dead, was the latest in month-long protests against embattled President Ali Abdullah Saleh.
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