…from beneath the crooked bough, witness 230 years of brutal tyranny by the al Khalifas come to an end
Random header image... Refresh for more!

Bahrain Monarchy Openly Defies the UN

Bahrain Monarchy Openly Defies the UN
The Trench – 22 September, 2012

Last Wednesday in Geneva, Switzerland, the United Nations Human Rights Council opened its doors for a day of comedy and political theater. Among the orders of business at the UNHRC’s 21st Session: a list of 176 recommendations to help Bahrain’s monarchy “improve the treatment of political activists, offer fair trials and ensure religious freedom.” Foreign Minister Sheikh Khalid Bin Ahmed Bin Mohammed Al Khalifa was on hand to play his part, gladly accepting the majority of recommendations as though he was being handed a trophy for model governance.

“Our actions, more than our words, should dispel any doubts regarding my government’s commitment to upholding human rights through the rule of law,” he said. “Let us follow the path of dialogue, not propaganda.”

Accordingly, Bahrainis shouldn’t follow their Foreign Minister’s trail of disinformation. In terms of strategy and tactics, however, one must give credit where credit is due. One of many pawns deployed by King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa, Bahrain’s Foreign Minister would participate in a full-scale information attack simultaneously coordinated with and directed against the international community. The King led his own assault on the UNHRC’s Universal Periodic Review (UPR), “hailing the approval of the Periodic Review Report as a landmark national achievement for Bahraini people and evidence reflecting the international community’s vote of confidence for the Kingdom’s reform steps and commitment to its international obligations.” Numerous ministers (and ally Saudi Arabia) rallied behind him to exploit Bahrain’s guinea pig status, lauding the country’s commitment to human rights amid the open wound of a suppressive counterrevolution. Foreign Minister Al-Khalifa, for example, placed UNHRC Commissioner Navy Pillay in his pocket when “affirming Bahrain’s keenness on continuing the reform process.”

Also entering the fray: the hawkish uncle of King Hamad and Prime Minister of 41 years, Prince Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa.

A leading critic of Bahrain’s democratic uprising, the Premier, “described the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC)’s approval of the kingdom’s Universal Periodic Review report as an honorable international legal achievement and a new proof of the government’s success in every field, especially regarding the protection of human rights and dignity, stressing that it is a positive and explicit response to the attempts to distort Bahrain’s rich legal record.”

Given these statements and the accumulation of repression since February 2011, Bahrain’s monarchy is demonstrably committed to human rights – abuses. The regime’s pushback against abolishment of the death penalty illustrates the absurd focus of its public defense. This amplified debate conveniently ignores the fact that fair trials and political freedom remain scarce commodities within Bahrain’s opposition, especially when many opposition leaders and their supporters reside in prison cells. Weeks ago a Bahrain High Court struck down a group of activists’ appeals and charged them with plotting an Iranian-sponsored coup. Only one defendant had the latter charge dropped; he was suspected of organizing “40 warships Iran was planning to send to Bahrain to support an attempted coup.”

Meanwhile Nabeel Rajab, possibly the country’s foremost democratic activist, has been jailed for three years (for instigating protests) and abused in prison as he awaits a hollow appeals process. Zainab Al-Khawaja joins her father, opposition leader Abdulhadi Al-Khawaja, in prison after being arrested for staging a solitary protest in Manama. She has been jailed at least six times since February 2011 and physically beaten on more than one occasion. Since these efforts to decapitate the opposition’s leadership have failed to stop the streets from mobilizing, the oppositional Al Wefaq has also been banned from holding large-scale protests in the capital and is now being threatened with a government lawsuit. Many of its ranking members, including Secretary-General Ali Salman, have already been assaulted on the streets and at their homes.

All those who protest against Hamad’s rule continue to labor under a gassy, black-clad curtain of security repression. Maryam Al Khawaja, Zainab’s sister and acting president of Rajab’s Bahrain Center for Human Rights (BCHR), warned from the UNHRC’s sidelines: “Use of excessive force is still a tool for suppressing daily protests, with unprecedented use of tear gas during protests and inside residential areas.”

“The Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry (BICI) released their report on the 23rd of November, 2011 which was unwavering in its criticism of the regime’s conduct, and highlights the systematic torture, human rights violations, and a culture of impunity which characterized the government’s handling of the protests,” reads the BCHR’s latest account of human rights violations. “King Hamad vowed to address and correct these violations, but to date these promises have proven to be empty. Almost one year has passed since the publication of the BICI report, and the people of Bahrain have seen no progress, and no peace.”

The inability of Bahrain’s monarchy to join its words with actions forced a slightly sharper tone from Washington during Wednesday’s session. Addressing the UNHCR on behalf of America was Michael Posner, Assistant Secretary for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor and de facto ambassador during Bahrain’s uprising. Posner welcomed the government’s initial steps to reform and pursue accountability before saying that “much more needs to be done,” even criticizing police for overreacting to protesters and “using excessive force.” This cycle drives peaceful and military resistance alike, and must be ended in order for Bahrain to stabilize. …more

Add facebook comments

There are no comments yet...

Kick things off by filling out the form below.

Leave a Comment