Posts from — May 2011
Bahraini students hounded in Britain
Bahraini students hounded in Britain
by Siân Ruddick
Bahraini students who study in Britain have had their scholarships and financial support revoked by their government.
They are accused of plotting to bring down the Bahraini regime because they have protested here.
It is part of a systematic attack on Bahraini citizens who support the protests for democracy.
Ahmed and Rashid are students in Britain whose scholarships were terminated by the Bahraini ministry of education. Ahmed told Socialist Worker, “The ministry contacted my family back home to say that the government has taken my scholarship away because I took part in a protest.
“I stand in solidarity with the Bahrani people calling for freedom and justice.
Allowance
“The scholarship pays our fees and a monthly allowance. If they stop the money I won’t be able to carry on. And I can’t go back to Bahrain—if I do, there are concerns I’ll be arrested. “This has put a lot of pressure on my family. They cannot afford to support me.”
Ahmed said that he knows of at least seven students whose funding was cut after they attended a protest in Manchester. Rashid also spoke to Socialist Worker. He said, “Three days after I went on a protest the education minister called my mother. Now they have cancelled everything. …more
May 5, 2011 No Comments
Bahrain renews emergency law as repression persists
Bahrain renews emergency law as repression persists
4 May 2011
AI Index: PRE01/235/2011
The Bahraini government must end its relentless crackdown on human rights, Amnesty International said today after the country’s parliament voted to extend a repressive state of emergency amid continued arrests of dissidents. “The Bahraini authorities must stop detaining anyone who opposes them and release protesters who have been locked up for peacefully demanding reform,” said Philip Luther, Amnesty International’s deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa.
“Even since the protests on the streets were violently crushed in mid-March the government’s persecution of dissidents has not abated, while the renewal of the so-called ‘State of National Safety’ will only exacerbate this human rights crisis.” Bahraini media reported that members of parliament yesterday voted overwhelmingly to extend the “State of National Safety” for another three months, even though it is not due to expire for another six weeks.
Emergency law had been used to arrest without judicial warrant and detain incommunicado protesters and political activists, as well as to try civilians before military courts. …more
May 5, 2011 No Comments
Physicians Urge Obama to Pressure Ally Bahrain to Stop Repression of Doctors, Patients
May 5, 2011 No Comments
UN urges Bahrain to free detained activists
UN urges Bahrain to free detained activists
UN human rights chief calls for political prisoners be released and for independent probe into allegations of torture.
Last Modified: 05 May 2011 18:23
The United Nations human rights chief has called for Bahrain to free activists it has seized since crushing anti-government protests and for an independent probe into allegations of torture. UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay’s remarks on Thursday were the sharpest international criticism yet of the crackdown in Bahrain where the Sunni-led government has arrested hundreds from its Shia Muslim majority since the protests began.
“All political detainees must be immediately released and all detainees must have prompt access to legal counsel,” Pillay said in a statement. “My office has also received reports of severe torture against human rights defenders who are currently in
detention… There must be independent investigations of these cases of death in detention and allegations of torture.”
At least four people have died in detention, and rights groups have criticised death sentences handed out last week to four men accused of killing policemen in March during protests that began with calls for more political liberties in the kingdom. The defendants in that case were accused of running down two policemen with a car in March. Also on Thursday, one man was sentenced to at least five years in jail and another was acquitted. State media earlier said they were accused of trying to kill security personnel by running them over.
At least 13 protesters and four police died in the unrest. Bahrain has said about 400 of those detained will face prosecution, some in a military court that last week handed down the first death sentence to a Bahraini citizen since the mid-1990s, also a period of sectarian-tinged political turmoil. …more
May 5, 2011 No Comments
Bahrain bent on silencing dissent
HRW: Bahrain bent on silencing dissent
Published: May 5, 2011 at 11:21 AM
WASHINGTON, May 5 (UPI) — The ruling Sunni minority in Bahrain is intent on punishing anyone who speaks out in opposition to the government, Human Rights Watch said. Two members of an outlawed Shiite al-Wefaq political party, Jawad Ferooz and Mattar Ibrahim Mattar, were arrested this week. The government banned the Shiite party and the opposition Islamic Action Society in April for breaking the law during mass protests and for inciting violence.
Wefaq in 2009 took 18 seats in the 40-member Parliament. Human Rights Watch notes the arrests are the first in Bahrain that targeted elected officials. Authorities in Manama are also under fire for allegedly targeting medical professionals after seven doctors were arrested during the recent crackdown.
Bahrain in the wake of revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt is struggling to suppress a Shiite uprising. Allegations surfaced that authorities are targeting hospitals and healthcare workers to hide the number of dead killed during the unrest.
Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement that the “vicious” attacks by Bahrain authorities are an obvious attempt to silence dissent. …more
May 5, 2011 No Comments
Bahrain sentences Shiite activist to 5 years – Activist Named
Bahrain sentences Shiite activist to 5 years
AP – 1 hr 7 mins ago
MANAMA, Bahrain – Bahrain’s security court on Thursday convicted a Shiite opposition activist and sentenced him to five years in prison for the attempted murder of a policeman during anti-government protests in the Gulf kingdom. The Bahrain News Agency said another activist was acquitted of the same charge in the court that was set up after emergency rule was imposed in March. The report said the convicted protester, Abdulla Mohammed Habib, can appeal his sentence.
Bahrain’s king declared martial law March 15 to crush weeks of demonstrations by the island’s Shiite majority, which has campaigned for greater freedoms and an elected government in the Sunni-ruled nation. At least 30 people have died since the protests, inspired by revolts in Tunisia and Egypt, began in February. Hundreds of protesters, opposition leaders, athletes, activists and Shiite professionals such as doctors and lawyers have been detained in the past month.
Last week, four Shiite activists were sentenced to death for killing two policemen during the protests. Three others were convicted as the accomplices in the killing and were sentenced to life in prison. On Tuesday, Bahrain’s Justice Minister Khaled bin Ali Al Khalifa said 23 doctors and 24 nurses have been charged for their role in the unrest, including for participating in attempts to topple the island’s Sunni monarchy and taking part in illegal rallies.
Bahrain is the home of the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet, Washington’s main counterweight against Iran’s expanding military influence in the oil-rich Gulf. …source
May 5, 2011 No Comments
Bahrain’s military court convicts yet to be named Shiite opposition activist
Bahrain court convicts Shiite activist, sends him to prison for 4 years over protest violence
By Associated Press, Updated: Thursday, May 5, 6:40 AM
MANAMA, Bahrain — Bahrain’s military court has convicted a Shiite opposition activist and sentenced him to five years in prison for the attempted murder of a policeman during anti-government protests in the Gulf kingdom. The Bahrain News Agency says another activist was acquitted of the same charge on Thursday.
Bahrain’s king declared martial law in March to crush weeks of demonstrations by the island’s Shiite majority, which has campaigned for greater freedoms in the Sunni-ruled nation. At least 30 people have died since the protests began in February. Hundreds of protesters, opposition leaders, doctors and lawyers have been detained since emergency rule was imposed.
Last week, four Shiite activists were sentenced to death for killing two policemen during the protests. …source
May 5, 2011 No Comments
US Human Rights Chief Slams Bahrain Military Trials
UN rights chief slams Bahrain military trials
GENEVA, May 05, 2011 (AFP) – UN human rights chief Navi Pillay on Thursday condemned death sentences imposed by military courts in Bahrain on protestors accused of killings as well as military trials for civilian activists. “The application of the death penalty without due process and after a trial held in secrecy is illegal and absolutely unacceptable,” the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said.
“The defendants are entitled to fair trials before civil courts, in accordance with international legal standards and in keeping with Bahrain’s international human rights obligations,” she added in a statement. Bahraini authorities have referred 47 doctors and nurses to a military court after accusing them of abusing their posts to take part in anti-regime protests that were crushed in March.
The UN human rights office said four protestors were sentenced to death last week and three to life imprisonment for the alleged killing of two policemen. They were reportedly held without access to their families and limited access to lawyers, it added. The Gulf kingdom, which is ruled by the Sunni Al-Khalifa dynasty, has come under strong criticism from international human rights organisations for its heavy-handed crackdown on Shiites, including medical staff.
Authorities have said that 24 people were killed during the unrest, most of them demonstrators. …source
May 5, 2011 No Comments
Bahrain Amal Islamic Society Under Seige by al Khalifa Regime
Urgent from #Bahrain Arrest of Secretary General of the Islamic Action Society Sheikh Mohamed Ali AlMahfoodh
Arrest of Sheikh Mohamed Ali AlMahfoodh
His and all of the detainees lives and safety are the responsibility of the king, his allies and supporters
In the name of Allah, the most merciful, most graceful
The Islamic Action Society declares that the Bahraini authorities have detained Sheikh Mohamed Ali AlMahfoodh, Secretary General of the Society, one of the widely known clergymen around the Islamic world and one of the opposition symbols in the country, a leader of a major civil society organization elected freely by its members. Sadly, the arrest of Sheikh AlMahfoodh falls in the course of a vicious repression campaign and a gag, freedom depriving system, launched by the authorities in response to the peaceful demands of the citizens of Bahrain of freedoms and human rights that are recognized worldwide, as well as the arrest of a religious leadership being a breach of local norms.
His arrest, also falls in a series of arrests of many citizens who compose the constructive fabric of the country and political and social leaders as a clear and frank response from the authorities in Bahrain to the calls of the international community for them to respect the freedoms and basic human rights and respect the right to peaceful expression of opinion.
The Bahraini authorities had already targeted the family of Sheikh AlMahfoodh and severely beat them after attacking his home in Bani Jamra and took his minor 16 year-old son Hassan as a hostage. By arrested Sheikh AlMahfoodh and his two sons, being the leader of the Society, the authorities have eliminated the Society itself, having already arrested most of the board members and over 40 staff members, which is a dangerous precedent, the first of its kind, to completely eliminate a major political society and place it behind bars. …more
May 5, 2011 No Comments
Bahrain, Kingdom of Silence
Bahrain, Kingdom of Silence
Toby C. Jones May 4, 2011 comments
An eerie silence and a paralyzing sense of fear currently grip Bahrain. Since mid-March, when tens of thousands of protesters last took to the streets demanding political reform, Bahraini security and military forces have engaged in an ongoing, systematic, and brutal campaign to crush the country’s pro-democracy forces. The crackdown has been sweeping and shocking. Dozens of activists have been killed. Hundreds more have been imprisoned and tortured. Bahrain’s leading independent newspaper, al-Wasat, is expected to close down on May 10.
Provocative government actions belie claims that all the monarchy seeks is to re-establish law and order. It is apparent, instead, that the government is using martial law to carry out a vendetta against those who challenged the authority of the ruling al-Khalifa. Checkpoints have been set up to harass the country’s Shi’i citizens, who make up the majority of Bahrain’s native population and of its political opposition. Security forces have laid siege to the island’s hospitals and arrested scores of medical personnel, in what appears to be an especially inhumane and spiteful kind of intimidation. For weeks police and pro-regime supporters roamed the streets of Shi’i villages destroying cars and other property. Those who supported the protests now fear leaving their homes, lest they be publicly accosted or, worse, arrested and disappeared.
The regime is also taking dramatic steps to quiet critics. Authorities have targeted newspapers, journalists, and bloggers in order to stymie public criticism, to control reporting about the scale of the crackdown, and to frighten into silence those who might speak out. In the last few weeks Bahraini blogs and twitter feeds that are normally vibrant have gone quiet, stunned into submission by the brutality of what is happening around them.
And they have reason to fear. Those who have spoken out or who have attempted to report events going on around them are paying a high price. …more
May 4, 2011 No Comments
King Hamad’s crackdown and harassment financially ruins Al Wasat – last of Bahrain’s free press
Bahrain’s Al Wasat daily to shut down next week
Heavy financial losses force Al Wasat newspaper in Bahrain to shut down
By Habib Toumi, Bureau Chief
Published: 18:20 May 3, 2011 Gulf News
Manama: Al Wasat daily, one of the five Arabic dailies in Bahrain, said that it would shut down next week, citing heavy financial losses.
The decision was supported by 18 board members and opposed by 14 at a meeting held on Monday to decide on the paper’s future after it waded into controversy last month and its editor in chief Mansoor Al Jamri resigned.
The daily was accused by the official media authority of misleading the public by publishing stories that were reportedly lifted from Palestinian and Moroccan newspapers and that created negative feelings about the security situation in Bahrain.
The daily’s former editor-in-chief, editor and local news editor were questioned by the public prosecutor over the issue.
Media sources said that the daily started facing advertisement problems and investors did not wish to take further risks and lose money. …more
May 4, 2011 No Comments
Bahrain’s, King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa a Disgrace and Embarrassment to Free Press Day Celebration
In Bahrain, World Press Non-Freedom Day
Written bySolana Larsen
Posted 3 May 2011 22:28 GMT
Today is World Press Freedom Day, a day that is being commiserated more than celebrated in many nations, including Bahrain, where journalists and bloggers are currently under siege by government.
Ironically, one of those world leaders celebrating World Press Freedom Day is King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa of Bahrain, one of 38 heads of state who have been named “predators of press freedom” by Reporters Without Borders. He issued a statement today saying that he believes “a free, impartial and independent Press is the backbone of democratic development.”
However, he also offered a few disclaimers, encouraging media to “move away from provoking hatred” as well as from provoking “violence, vandalism or terrorism” and “breaking the law or violating public morals and people’s dignity.”
Though the king said that “no one will be harmed because of peaceful and civilised expressions of opinion under the law,” more than 70 journalists, online writers, and bloggers have recently been fired, arrested, or threatened in Bahrain, according to an online spreadsheet released by Bahrain Center for Human Rights today.
Nearly 20 of those mentioned on the spreadsheet are bloggers or online activists. Among them is the founder of Al Dair online forum, Zakariya Al Aushayri, who died in prison on April 9, 2011. Others have been arrested, interrogated, or classified as “traitors”. Founder of BahrainOnline.org and Global Voices Advocacy contributor Ali Abdulemam was previously arrested and is now living undercover within Bahrain. …more
May 4, 2011 No Comments
Military court that Passed Death Sentences to Try Medical Professionals on Similar Charges
Bahraini authorities have referred 47 medics to a military court after accusing them of abusing their posts to take part in anti-regime protests that were crushed in March.
The defendants include 24 doctors and 23 nurses, the kingdom’s Information Affairs Authority (IAA) said in a statement late Tuesday, adding that the military prosecution has already leveled several charges against them.
Authorities set up a military court after King Hamad declared a state of national safety, a lower level of emergency, a day before security forces crushed a Shiite-dominated month-long protest demanding democratic reforms.
The medics have all worked at the Salmaniya Medical Complex in Manama, which was stormed by security forces after they drove protesters on March 16 out of the nearby Pearl Square – the focal point of protests inspired by uprisings that have swept the Arab world.
At the time, Bahraini state media accused medics who sympathized with the protesters of occupying the SMC and turning it into a protest ground. …more
May 4, 2011 No Comments
Saudi-backed Bahraini authorities prepared to carry out death sentences
As Saudi-backed Bahraini authorities prepared to carry out death sentences against four anti-government protesters for the murder of two security officers, forces loyal to King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa continued their campaign of arresting physicians and nurses to make it impossible for them see and treat wounds allegedly inflicted by government gunmen.
Twenty-three doctors and 24 nurses were arrested yesterday and charged with a laundry list of crimes including, embezzlement of public funds, physical assault on civilians, assault leading to death, possession of unlicensed weapons and ammunition, failure to carry out their employment duties, in aims of hindering medical work, consequently endangering people’s health and lives, attempting to forcefully occupying a public building, efforts to bring down and change the regime by illegal means,
inciting hatred against the governing regime, promoting sectarian hate, spreading false news and rumors that harm public interest, and participating in unlicensed protests and rallies.
The arrests included Dr. Ahmed Jamal, president of the Bahrain Medical Society. …more
May 4, 2011 No Comments
Bahrain Government Systematic Oppression of Journalism and Free Speech
Journalists in Bahrain: The Murder of Free Speech and the Siege of Freedom
More than 68 journalists have been subjected to lay-off, arrest and threats because of their work Bahraini journalists call for a helping hand and for the adoption of measures to insure their safety. – 3 May 2011
Since the 14th of February 2011, Bahrain has seen a political movement demanding freedom, democracy, and the revival of communal partnership in the framework of the civil movements seeking freedom which are currently overrunning Arab countries. This was followed by brutal security crackdowns and the entry of the Peninsula Shield forces (Military units of 6 Gulf countries) into Bahrain. Journalists engaged in this event with daily coverage through both their jobs at local newspapers, through their announcements on satellite television stations, by writing to Arabic newspapers in the framework of their presence at the site of action, and via effective action through online social networking tools such as Facebook and Twitter. Because of that, journalists have been subjected to a campaign of lay-offs and collective arrests affecting more than 68 journalists, while many have received different threats originating from the Bahraini authorities, its associated organizations, and affiliated parties. The online activist Zakariya Al Aushayri has been killed in detention and Reporters without Borders have released an official statement demanding an investigation into the incident, indeed the reporters Faisal Hayyat, Hayder Mohammad, Ali Jawad, and other bloggers and e-activist have been arrested. Warrants have been issued for others as well, causing some to leave Bahrain, in fear of their personal safety. …more
May 3, 2011 No Comments
Sytematic Terrorism by Bahrain Government against Medical Professionals
Bahrain doctors to be tried for helping protesters
Tuesday, May 3, 2011, in Isa Town, Bahrain. — PHOTO: AP
MANAMA – BAHRAIN’S justice minister says several doctors and nurses who treated injured anti-government protesters during months of unrest in the Gulf kingdom will be tried in a military court. Khaled bin Ali Al Khalifa says 23 doctors and 24 nurses face several protest-related charges, including participating in attempts to topple the Sunni monarchy.
He listed the charges at a press conference in the capital Manama on Tuesday. Dozens of doctors, nurses and other medical staff have been in custody since March, when the king declared martial law to crush Shiite dissent. International rights groups say Bahrain is targeting medical professionals who treated injured demonstrators at the Salmaniya medical center, which was later overrun by the military. — AP
List of Charges
by Bahrain Youth society for Human Rights
Defendants:
24 Doctors.
23 Nurses.
The following list of accusations has been made against the medical staff:
1. The inexcusable refrain from aiding people.
2.The embezzlement of public funds.
3.physical assault on other.
4. Assault leading to death.
5.The possession of unlicensed weapons and ammunition.
6. Refraining from carrying out their employment duties, in aims of hindering medical work, consequently endangering people’s health and lives.
7. The attempt of forcefully occupying a public building.
8.Promotion to bring down and change the regime by illegal means.
9. Accused of inciting hatred against the governing regime.
10.Promoting sectarian hate.
11.Spreading false news and rumours that harm the public interest.
12.Participating in unlicensed protests and rallies.
May 3, 2011 No Comments
More Al Khalifa Terror and Atrocities in Systematic Detention of Party Leaders
The Bahraini government has arrested two prominent politicians belonging to the mainly Shia opposition Al Wefaq party, Al Jazeera has learnt. Both Jawad Ferooz, the vice-president of the party, and Mattar Ibrahim Mattar, who recently resigned as a member of parliament, were detained on Monday evening, sources said.
The arrests came a day after Mattar spoke to Al Jazeera about the threats to opposition politicians, as well as the presence, if any, of a sectarian divide amongst protesters. “As an example of the threats … a brother of a member of parliament had been killed in custody, and also some of the activists in Wefaq, they already started to attack them, and to arrest them. In fact, yes they didn’t close Al Wefaq, but Al Wefaq is a vacuum currently,” he said.
“It is difficult for us to move and to communicate with people. [There is] no space any more for political movement, and political activities that we can do. No space for movement and freedom of speech and the basic humanitarian issues, such as medical services.” Mattar told Al Jazeera that Sunnis and Shias alike had been arrested, which indicated that there was not a strong sectarian divide amongst anti-government protesters. …more
May 3, 2011 No Comments
HRW says Bahrain should set aside death sentences
HRW says Bahrain should set aside death sentences
02 May 2011, Monday / AP, DUBAI
Bahrain should set aside death sentences that a military court passed on four men over the killing of two policemen during anti-government protests, U.S.-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on Monday. HRW also urged the kingdom to set aside the convictions of three men sentenced to life in prison for their alleged involvement in the killings in March. It argued the accused were kept from meeting lawyers and defending themselves.
“By establishing these special courts, the government of Bahrain is making it near impossible for defendants to enjoy the rights to which they are entitled,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at the rights group. The verdicts came amid heightened antagonism between Bahrain’s Shi’ite Muslim majority and its Sunni ruling family after Bahrain crushed anti-government protests in March with military help from fellow Sunni-led Gulf Arab neighbours.
“The role of the military prosecutor, the makeup of the special court, and the meager access to legal representation undermine the most basic due process protections,” Stork said. HRW said the trial and sentencing of the seven defendants, aged 19 to 24, lasted less than two weeks. They were the first civilians convicted in special military courts set up after the declaration of martial law on March 15.
It was only the third time in more than three decades that a death sentence had been issued against citizens of Bahrain, a U.S. ally which hosts the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet. …source
May 3, 2011 No Comments
Bahrain king ‘sows terror among journalists’
By Agence France-Presse
Monday, May 2nd, 2011 — 7:55 pm
PARIS — Media rights watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) added Bahrain’s King Hamad bin Issa al-Khalifa to its latest blacklist of “predators” against press freedom on Tuesday.
The king entered the watchdog’s list of 38 state “predators” that “sow terror among journalists”, which included three Arab countries hit by recent protests — Syria, Bahrain, Yemen — and Libya, where conflict has broken out.
RSF said journalists were killed in each of these countries, citing cases including that of Karim Fakhrawi, a Bahraini journalist close to the opposition, who died in detention.
Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and Zine El Abidine Ben Ali of Tunisia were no longer on this list after they were driven from power in revolutions this year.
The watchdog said crackdowns were under way by authorities in countries including China that fear “contagion” from the wave of pro-democracy protests in the Arab world.
The list also includes warlords and armed entities such as the Israeli armed forces, the forces of Hamas in Gaza and the Basque armed group ETA. …source
May 3, 2011 No Comments
UAE Civil Society Crackdown
UAE: Civil Society Crackdown Widens
Government Takes Over a Second Group’s Board
May 3, 2011
(London) – The United Arab Emirates expanded its crackdown on civil society on May 2, 2011, by dissolving the elected board of directors of the Teachers’ Association, Human Rights Watch said today. This was the second prominent civil society organization to face a hostile government takeover in less than two weeks.
“This attack on civil society is further proof that those in power in the UAE see anyone calling for reform as fair game,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “UAE authorities should immediately stop their hostile takeover of civil society and free the peaceful democracy activists.”
The decree, signed by Social Affairs Minister Mariam Mohammed Khalfan Al Roumi, dismissed the Teachers’ Association’s board and replaced its members with state appointees. The minister issued a similar decree issued on April 21, dissolving the board of the Jurist Association. On April 6, both associations, along with two other nongovernmental organizations, co-signed a public appeal calling for greater democracy in the country. Since April 8, the UAE has also detained at least five prominent democracy activists.
According to the decree, the Teachers’ Association violated section 16 of the UAE’s 2008 Law on Associations, which prohibits nongovernmental organizations and their members from interfering “in politics or in matters that impair state security and its ruling regime.” The ministerial decree against the Jurist Association cited the same infraction. The Law on Associations tightly controls nongovernmental organizations permitted to operate in the UAE. The Teachers’ Association was established in 1980 to represent and defend the rights of teachers and has more than 280 Emirate members. …more
May 3, 2011 No Comments
Bahrain’s al-Khalifa regime’s dissonance grows in wake of it’s violent crackdown…
Bahrain Slams Foreign Media for Description of Protesters Sentenced to Death — Official Statement Objects to Calling Them ‘Protesters’
by Jason Ditz, May 01, 2011
The Bahraini government’s Information Affairs Authority (IAA) issued a statement this weekend angrily condemning the global media for its coverage of the trial of several Shi’ite protesters sentenced to death.
According to Bahrain’s state news agency, the IAA objected to the foreign media referring to the protesters as “protesters.” The state media referred to them only as “criminals” or “terrorists,” and those seem to have been the government’s preferred terms.
The IAA insisted it was unprofessional for media outlets to refer to them as protesters, saying that it gave the impression that they “have the right to protest.” The seven charged were in fact protesting at the time and were accused of killing two police during the crackdown against Shi’ite protests. …more
May 2, 2011 No Comments
Letter to President Obama from daughter of Bahrain, Amal Islamic Society Chairman, Sheikh Moahmmed Ali Almahfoodh
[this letter has been authenticated and published as a public record of it’s exisence]
Dear Mr President,
I am writing to you from Bahrain. First, I would like to congratulate you concerning Bin Ladin. However, I am writing to you concerning my country Bahrain. I am the daughter of Sheikh Moahmmed Ali Almahfoodh, the chairman of Amal Islamic Society. I would like to tell you that yesterday he was detained with my two brothers to an unknown destination. A month ago, my husband was arrested as a hostage.
Mr President, This action is your full responsibility, since your policy is to spread democracy. Your administration condemned the dissolve of the societies, and therefore, you have the upper hand to release my father and brothers, and husband. My mother has collapsed as to the news. I beseech your help and protection, and whatever happens to my detained family is under your responsibility.
Finally, I strongly urge your administration to prove to the world that the US respects their values and morals, and not double standards as many people are pointing out currently. I always looked at the US constitution as my aspiration to a better world.
I want to thank you for your time, and I hope something happens to reunite my family again.
Best wishes,
Hajar Mahfoodh
May 2, 2011 No Comments
Breaking News – al-Khalifa Regime detains Bahrain Amal Islamic Society Chairman, Sheikh Moahmmed Ali Almahfoodh
We have received information from reliable sources that Bahrain’s Amal Islamic Society Chairman, Sheikh Moahmmed Ali Almahfoodh and his sons, Hussein Almahfoodh, 26 years old, and Hasan Almahfoodh, 17 years old, who have been in hiding since the al Khalifa regimes crackdown to eliminate democracy and human rights advocates, were detained around 3:00AM May 2nd, Bahrain time. …more information to follow.
May 2, 2011 No Comments
Berlin May Day demo condemns ongoing Bahrain repression
Berlin May Day demo condemns ongoing Bahrain repression
Berlin, May 1, IRNA —
Berlin’s traditional May Day demonstration condemned on Sunday the ongoing brutal repression in Bahrain, while calling for an immediate withdrawal of all Saudi military forces from the tiny Persian Gulf kingdom.
Waving numerous Bahraini flags, demonstrators strongly condemned the crimes committed by the Bahraini regime.
They urged the release of all political prisoners in Bahrain and a full international probe of massive human rights violations in that country.
Demonstrators deplored the desecration of mosques by the Bahraini regime. Protesters demanded a swift pullout of Saudi troops from Bahrain.
At Manama’s request, several Arab Persian Gulf states, notably Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, have dispatched troops to help quell the uprising in the country in March, a move which the Bahraini opposition has branded ‘an occupation.’
Meanwhile, protesters lambasted western countries, namely the US and European Union, for their double-standard when dealing with the brutal crackdown of the Bahraini regime.
Dozens of Bahraini protesters have been killed in government crackdowns which included also the use of live ammunition, according to human rights activists.
Hundreds of people had been arrested, and hundreds more were fired from their jobs for participating in pro-democracy demonstrations against the Bahraini regime which began in mid-February. …source
May 1, 2011 No Comments