1.801109-1089589857
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton greets Oman’s Foreign Minister Yousuf Bin Alawi Bin Abdullah at the State Department in Washington on Thursday. Image Credit: AP

Muscat: Omani citizens, continuing their sit-ins in Salalah and Sur, marched in the two cities after Friday prayers yesterday as hundreds of demonstrators joined in.

In southern parts of Oman for the second Friday in succession over a thousand people gathered.

"We had over 1,500 people in the rally that started from our sit-in square in front of the governor's office and went past the Central Salalah Square, past the Salalah Police Station and returned to the place of sit-in," an activist, who preferred not to be named, told Gulf News.

'We want freedom'

A banner in English at the rally read "We want freedom". The activists in Oman are demanding freedom of expression following the blockade of some of the forum sites by the local telecom operators.

The demonstrators were asking for an inquiry into charges of corruption against some of the high officials among other demands.

A resident of Salalah said that the march was peaceful and a large number of people attended. He also praised the security agencies in handling the whole situation prudently. Activists in Salalah have been staging sit-ins outside the Governor's office since the end of February along with sit-ins at Muscat and Sohar.

The sit-ins in Sohar have ended and normality has returned to this industrial port town since the beginning of this month when post-Friday prayer protests turned violent and one person died. The army took control after that, brought the situation under control, and also ended all sit-ins.

Peaceful

The protests in Oman started in January when about 200 people staged a peaceful rally in a restricted area in the Al Khuwair district of Muscat. The protests were largely peaceful, then they spread to Sohar, Salalah, Sur and Shinaz and Ibri.

The country's monarch Sultan Qaboos Bin Saeed responded to the demand, positively by reshuffling the entire Council of Ministers, raising salaries, announcing 50,000 jobs for young Omanis, raising pensions and also calling for a 150 Omani riyal unemployment allowance.

Some of the citizens held on charges of rioting were pardoned by the Sultan. However, some of the activists are still demanding freedom of expression, more reforms and release of those still held after the Sohar protests.

Friday, people in Sur in the eastern region also rallied but the numbers were not as big as in Salalah. No further details about the Sur rally were available.