- Bahraini and Saudi security forces continue daily terror
in Bahrain, human rights groups condemning the violence, including Amnesty
International (AI), providing regular updates.
-
- On May 11, AI reported more than 47 health professionals,
including doctors and nurses, have been arrested, charged and may face
trial before a military court for doing their job. All are Shias in a Sunni-run
state.
-
- Entirely bogus charges against them include:
-
- -- refusing to help people in need;
-
- -- embezzling public funds;
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- -- assaults causing deaths;
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- -- unauthorized possession of weapons and ammunition;
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- -- refusing to perform duties;
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- -- putting people's lives and health at risk;
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- -- illegal detention;
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- -- abusing authority;
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- -- attempting to forcefully occupy buildings;
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- -- incitement to forcibly overthrow the Khalifa monarchy;
-
- -- incitement of regime hatred;
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- -- incitement of the hatred of a segment of society;
-
- -- disseminating false news and malicious rumors, harming
the public interest; and
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- -- participating in unauthorized rallies and meetings.
-
- AI calls the accusations "vague" and "trumped
up." In fact, those charged are for participating in peaceful protests,
treating injured demonstrators, and denouncing state violence - noble acts,
not crimes.
-
- On May 12, the Bahrain Center for Human Rights (BCHR)
confirmed over 900 arrested, disappeared, and/or tortured, as well as at
least 31 deaths. Most participated in peaceful protests. Others were engaged
in routine daily activities, but were arrested anyway in broad sweeps.
-
- Among the dead was a 15-year old boy shot in the eye
with a rubber bullet while playing near his home. His father said he was
also pistol-whipped on his neck, causing it to snap. "I picked him
up, and I could hear him breathing in pain," he said. "He took
his last breath and then he did not breathe again. He died in my arms."
-
- A 71-year old, Isa Mohammed, died of asphyxiation in
his home from heavy tear gas firing. His family's plea for medical care
was denied. Others died in custody from beatings and torture.
-
- BCHR called torture "institutionalized within the
Bahraini judicial and penal systems." A 2010 Omar Ahmed Islamic Human
Rights Commission (IHRC) report titled, "Broken Promises: Human Rights,
Constitutionalism and Socio-economic Exclusion in Bahrain" explained
abuses and unfulfilled reforms.
-
- Most Bahrainis are politically and economically deprived.
Poverty and unemployment are extreme. High level corruption is extensive.
Past confrontations between protesters and security forces resulted in
violence, arrests, torture, other abuses and deaths. Oppressive measures
are taken to prevent democratic reforms, including restricting free expression,
assembly and association.
-
- Moreover, human rights groups accuse authorities of "arbitrarily
detaining opposition figures and....activists, subjecting (them) to torture
and ill-treatment."
-
- Overall, monarchal rule represents failed constitutionalism
and state cronyism, institutionalized by security force harshness, enforced
through brutal crackdowns, including widespread use of torture.
-
- Explicitly prohibited under international law, Chapter
III, Article 19, Clause (d) of Bahrain's 2002 Constitution also states:
-
- "No person shall be subjected to physical or mental
torture, or inducement, or undignified treatment, (and any) statement or
confession proved (made) under torture, inducement, or such treatment,
or the threat thereof, shall be null and void."
-
- The Arab Charter on Human Rights also bans torture and
other abuses and ill-treatment. It's strictly prohibited at all times,
under all conditions, with no allowed exceptions.
-
- Nonetheless, well-documented cases show it's extensively
used to extract forced confessions for state prosecutions.
-
- Of note was a 2002 King Hamad royal decree, granting
persons accused of torture immunity for prior alleged instances when it
was practiced freely to punish and extract confessions for trials. Under
Hamad, nothing changed.
-
- Moreover, in 2005, the UN Committee Against Torture expressed
concerns for lack of a clear Bahrain definition. In 2008, they were again
raised regarding the treatment of five Unemployment Committee members,
arrested between December 21 and 28, 2007 during state violence at the
time.
-
- Released on January 10, 2008, they reported being beaten,
verbally abused, intimidated, deprived of sleep and food, incarcerated
in solitary confinement, and subjected to prolonged use of handcuffs and
blindfolds.
-
- In February 2010, Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported that
since December 2007, authorities routinely used torture to extract confessions,
including:
-
- -- electric shocks;
-
- -- suspensions in painful positions;
-
- -- beating feet with rubber hoses and/or batons;
-
- -- kicking, punching, slapping, and striking detainees
with implements;
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- -- forced standing for prolonged periods; and
-
- -- threatened rape or death.
-
- Experts say Bahrain's General Directorate of Criminal
Investigations (CID) bears most responsibility. It reports to the Interior
Ministry, administering jails and detention facilities under the Justice
Ministry's supervision.
-
- A recent 2011 IHRC Report is titled "Emergency Briefing
on the Human Rights Situation in Bahrain," explaining widespread,
systematic abuses ongoing for months in the latest crackdown. It covers:
-
- -- mass arrests;
- -- disappearances;
-
- -- torture, other abuses, and ill-treatment;
-
- -- extrajudicial killings;
-
- -- use of repressive Saudi and Gulf Cooperation Council
(GCC) state forces;
-
- -- purging political opposition;
-
- -- suppressing intellectuals, students, doctors, nurses,
journalists, other professionals, and activists;
-
- -- marginalizing Shias;
-
- -- attacking civil society;
-
- -- sacking professional sportspeople; and
-
- -- suppressing any effort challenging state authority.
-
- In its May edition, Crescent Magazine headlined, "Acts
of sacrilege, rape, torture and murder in Bahrain," discussing "indescribable
crimes against innocent civilians," showing collusion with America
and Saudi Arabia.
-
- Bahraini and Saudi security forces, in fact, are committing
"wanton acts of vandalism and sacrilege," including destroying
mosques and desecrating the Koran. Moreover, Bahraini forces committed
one of the most shocking crimes against a 20-year old female poet named
Ayat al-Qermezi.
-
- In late March, state security forces arrested her. She
was missing until confirmed hospitalized in a coma in mid-April, victimized
by repeated rapes. She died after failed attempts to save her. Western
media provided scant coverage. In Bahrain, brutality against her was suppressed.
Al Jazeera also excluded her from its coverage.
-
- Another disturbing case involved Ahlia University Professor
Masaud Jahromi, Engineering Department Chairman. A highly respected academic,
Bahraini security forces arrested him in the middle of the night on April
14 even though he wasn't involved in protests. Being Shia is his only crime,
reason enough to arrest, torture and perhaps kill him.
-
- Saudi and Bahraini security forces are brutalizing innocent
civilians, their lives now a living hell. "Their neighborhoods are
under constant surveillance; armored personnel carriers and tanks are stationed
on every street corner with security personnel smashing cars and property"
randomly to intimidate and terrorize.
-
- Western media barely mention the most extreme acts of
injustice, nor do leaders in Washington, London, Paris and other EU capitals,
vilifying Gaddafi but ignoring the worst Bahraini abuses.
-
- A Final Note
-
- On May 8, trials for 21 arrested Bahrainis began, including
seven in absentia, persecuted victims charged with plotting to overthrow
the monarchy. All 14 defendants present pleaded innocent. Two international
human rights observers were denied access to proceedings. However, representatives
from a select few NGOs were present. Bail requests were rejected. Of concern
are reports of torture in detention, and defendant Abdulhadi al-Khawaja
saying in court:
-
- "Today I was threatened in this place (meaning prison).
My life is in danger."
-
- Throughout their incarceration, they got no access to
families or lawyers until 24 hours before trial for attorneys only, providing
no time to prepare. Their ordeal is of no interest to Obama or official
Washington.
-
- Under conditions of martial law, their fate seems assured,
guilty of wanting democratic freedoms, corruption ended, violence and state
terror stopped, and state oil revenues used equitably for all Bahrainis.
As a result, despite all they've endured so far, their ordeal likely just
began unless sentenced to death to end it. Either way, will official Washington
and Big Media notice?
-
- Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com
and listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the
Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays
at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening.
-
- http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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