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Showing posts with label Bahrain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bahrain. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Exiled and 24: The Young Woman Fighting for Bahrain



Exiled and 24: The Young Woman Fighting for Bahrain

When Maryam al-Khawaja and I first met in March, in a dingy hospital hallway in Manama, Bahrain’s regime had just tear gassed hundreds of its staunchest detractors, shooting them with rubber bullets and live ammunition while they slept and prayed. The dead and wounded were brought to Salmaniya medical center, where their loved ones were met by an energetic girl in jeans and a head scarf, hopping from floor to floor directing foot traffic, doling out information to worried families, and escorting aid workers. 

Around 3 a.m., with the screams of a grieving mother echoing down the corridor, Maryam delivered a denunciation indictment of the U.S.’s silence on what was going on around her, calling Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s criticism of the regime a mere wrist slap. By May, she had found a bigger audience, having left Bahrain for the U.S. and Europe, her anecdotes and big brown eyes humanizing Bahrain’s faltering opposition for a West that did not fully understand it. 

From Brown University to the Oslo Freedom Forum to Voice of America, she preached the gospel that had been violently muted on Manama’s streets — the regime, she repeated, was doing grievous things, and the U.S. and its allies needed to step up their rhetoric. 

Last week, her work took on a new urgency, when father Abdulhadi al-Khawaja, the country’s best-known opposition activist, was marched into a closed-door military tribunal and sentenced to life in prison for anti-government propaganda. 

That a 24-year-old girl has become the face of one of the most repressed Arab Spring revolutions comes as a surprise only to those who don’t know her lineage. Maryam’s was born in Denmark to then-exiled Abdulhadi and his wife, Khadija, who had been banned from Bahrain in the mid-1980s. They lived in Denmark until returning to Manama in 2001, as soon as they were allowed re-entry. Maryam was 14

Read more at The Atlantic

[Image: Maryam in Manama before leaving the country / Twitter]

“At the Olympics race or religion is irrelevant,...



“At the Olympics race or religion is irrelevant, we’re all just here to do sport.”

- Roqaya Al Ghasara (of Bahrain), 100m sprinter.

…So why can’t everyone stop fussing so we can watch a good game?

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Queen Sabika bint Ibrahim Al Khalifa



“Officially, the U.S. does not pay other governments for rights to military bases. The logic is straightforward: funneling money to the treasuries of foreign dictators cannot form the foundation of genuine strategic alliances. Yet, to fight wars in Iraq and Afghanistan while staring down the mullahs in Iran, over the last decade the Pentagon has come to rely in an unprecedented way on a web of bases across the Middle East. And a NEWSWEEK investigation of Pentagon contracting practices in Abu Dhabi, Kuwait, and Bahrain has uncovered more than $14 billion paid mostly in sole-source contracts to companies controlled by ruling families across the Persian Gulf.

[…] Look at the kingdom of Bahrain, where Arab Spring protests have raged this past month. It’s also home to the 60-acre headquarters of the U.S.’s Fifth Fleet. King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa rules the country, and as it happens, Bahrain is also host to the regional headquarters for the [Defense Logistics Agency’s] energy operations—the office that buys all fuel for the U.S. military in the first place. Every year Bahrain’s national oil company routinely wins a chunk of a huge Pentagon contract, called WestPac, to provide fuel to U.S. military operations in the western Pacific. Bahrain’s national fuel company has achieved a rare status: the kingdom, which has a population of barely more than 1 million people, has became one of the American military’s chief fuel suppliers, taking in billions. The DLA points out that Bahrain’s fuel sales are not a sole-source contract like the ones in Abu Dhabi. Instead, the Pentagon says, Bahrain always wins because its bid is low; it offers vast quantities of fuel; and it has few, if any, competitors among the ‘traditional suppliers’ in the region. David Kirsh, a director at the oil—consulting firm PFC Energy, says, ‘The Bahrain Petroleum Co. probably would not be winning these contracts if not for the base.’ The official at the DLA says the agency does its best to provide fuel at low cost to U.S. forces around the world.” - Aram Roston

Welfare for Dictators: A NEWSWEEK investigation reveals how Pentagon billions are flowing to strongmen in the Middle East

[Above: The tarmac at the Al Dhafra military base in the United Arab Emirates.]

Welfare for Dictators:

“[A] NEWSWEEK investigation of Pentagon contracting practices in Abu Dhabi, Kuwait, and Bahrain has uncovered more than $14 billion paid mostly in sole-source contracts to companies controlled by ruling families across the Persian Gulf. The revelation raises a fundamental question: are U.S. taxpayer dollars enriching the ruling potentates of friendly regimes just as the youthful protesters and the Arab Spring have brought a new push for democracy across the region?”

Okay, this kind of bothers me.



Queen Sabika bint Ibrahim Al Khalifa

Sheikha Sabika bint Ibrahim Al Khalifa is the Queen and the first wife of the King of Bahrain, Hamad ibn Isa Al Khalifa. She is head of the Supreme Council for Women in Bahrain and has largely encouraged the expansion of women’s politicial rights in Bahrain. She was influential in encouraging women to vote in the 2001 elections. In June 2005 she hosted the first ladies of the Arab world in Bahrain for the second meeting of the Higher Council of Arab Women Organization. 

there is literally no grass where i live. 

there is literally no grass where i live. 

According to this, Bahrainis are the most spiritual nationality...

[UN News Center] Bahrain trials bear marks of ‘political persecution,’ says UN human rights office[PBS] Treatment of jailed Bahrain dissidents called ‘brutal,’ as activists call for U.S. action

I joined Avaaz, a petition website some months back because I wanted to sign to prevent homosexuality becoming punishable by death in Uganda. They’ve been bombarding me with notifications about petitions that I “must” sign ever since. I do read them, but most of them I ignore because they seem to be pointless campaigns over little things that they’re going about the wrong way. The latest message has really ticked me off:

They’re patting themselves on the back for getting Formula 1 to pull out of the Bahrain Grand Prix this year in order to boycott their trade in drugs. I have a series of issues with this.

1. Seriously? You think that taking away their rights to host Formula 1 (which they don’t even have a driver in) is going to bring down their vast drug empire. It’s pretty much like cricket disowning Zimbabwe. Mugabi was not particularly upset.

2. You’ve pulled an entire sport, which has drivers, technicians, teams and fans from all around the world, into a fight which wasn’t theirs. Bahrain has been the opening race for quite a few seasons, so every time that they go there, will they be expected to comment on their political stance on it? They’re sportsmen, not politicians.

3. You’ve damaged the sport. If this is a permanent fixture until the drugs business goes, then they’ve lost a race, because I don’t see the problem disappearing. You messed the teams about this year because they called it off so close to the actual day that all the gear was in mid-air, which has probably affected at least one team this season. You’ve also annoyed sports fans around the world. Not every country holds a Grand Prix, so many fans at Bahrain wouldn’t have been nationals of the country, but have lost their nearest race.

4. Honestly, practically all countries do drugs of some kind. Bahrain is just more open about it than others. It’s not as if the racers are partaking and the Bahrain Grand Prix was damaging the sport in any way.

I do agree that Bernie Eccleston is about as money grabbing as they come, but people loved Bahrain and you’ve ruined it for them, and it was clear that Bahrain meant a lot more than any money involved. You’re little hissy fit at F1 has only made people upset and to be honest, you were always going to be pissing in the wind with this one.

Bahrain medics return to court | CNN:

More than two dozen medics accused of misdemeanors returned to court in Bahrain on Monday.

The case is one of two involving 24 doctors and 23 nurses and paramedics who are accused of working against the kingdom’s government during large protests earlier this year.

Prosecutors allege the accused refused to help patients at Salmaniya Medical Complex, the main hospital in Manama. Charges also include deadly assault, storing and funneling weapons to protesters, and effectively holding people hostage, according to Bahrain’s Information Affairs Authority. [read more]

I support prisoners of conscience in Bahrain
http://bit.ly/lesFDX 14feb

Bahrain footballer jailed for anti-govt protest
http://bit.ly/kOqJxp 14feb

Bahrain youth society for humanrights
http://ping.fm/ad91w

Akbar Ahmed on the Kojo Nnamdi Show, "Bahrain: Small Country, Big Ally":

Monday, June 27, 2011

Bahrain youth society for humanrights

Bahrain medics return to court | CNN:

More than two dozen medics accused of misdemeanors returned to court in Bahrain on Monday.

The case is one of two involving 24 doctors and 23 nurses and paramedics who are accused of working against the kingdom’s government during large protests earlier this year.

Prosecutors allege the accused refused to help patients at Salmaniya Medical Complex, the main hospital in Manama. Charges also include deadly assault, storing and funneling weapons to protesters, and effectively holding people hostage, according to Bahrain’s Information Affairs Authority. [read more]

I support prisoners of conscience in Bahrain
http://bit.ly/lesFDX 14feb

Bahrain footballer jailed for anti-govt protest
http://bit.ly/kOqJxp 14feb

Bahrain youth society for humanrights
http://ping.fm/ad91w

[PBS] Treatment of jailed Bahrain dissidents called ‘brutal,’ as activists call for U.S. action



Inside Story - Bahrain stability in jeopardy

[UN News Center] Bahrain trials bear marks of ‘political persecution,’ says UN human rights office

I joined Avaaz, a petition website some months back because I wanted to sign to prevent homosexuality becoming punishable by death in Uganda. They’ve been bombarding me with notifications about petitions that I “must” sign ever since. I do read them, but most of them I ignore because they seem to be pointless campaigns over little things that they’re going about the wrong way. The latest message has really ticked me off:

They’re patting themselves on the back for getting Formula 1 to pull out of the Bahrain Grand Prix this year in order to boycott their trade in drugs. I have a series of issues with this.

1. Seriously? You think that taking away their rights to host Formula 1 (which they don’t even have a driver in) is going to bring down their vast drug empire. It’s pretty much like cricket disowning Zimbabwe. Mugabi was not particularly upset.

2. You’ve pulled an entire sport, which has drivers, technicians, teams and fans from all around the world, into a fight which wasn’t theirs. Bahrain has been the opening race for quite a few seasons, so every time that they go there, will they be expected to comment on their political stance on it? They’re sportsmen, not politicians.

3. You’ve damaged the sport. If this is a permanent fixture until the drugs business goes, then they’ve lost a race, because I don’t see the problem disappearing. You messed the teams about this year because they called it off so close to the actual day that all the gear was in mid-air, which has probably affected at least one team this season. You’ve also annoyed sports fans around the world. Not every country holds a Grand Prix, so many fans at Bahrain wouldn’t have been nationals of the country, but have lost their nearest race.

4. Honestly, practically all countries do drugs of some kind. Bahrain is just more open about it than others. It’s not as if the racers are partaking and the Bahrain Grand Prix was damaging the sport in any way.

I do agree that Bernie Eccleston is about as money grabbing as they come, but people loved Bahrain and you’ve ruined it for them, and it was clear that Bahrain meant a lot more than any money involved. You’re little hissy fit at F1 has only made people upset and to be honest, you were always going to be pissing in the wind with this one.

[PBS] Treatment of jailed Bahrain dissidents called ‘brutal,’ as activists call for U.S. action

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Manama - Kingdom of Bahrain```



Photo by John Moore



Manama - Kingdom of Bahrain

Photo

Those who want to discuss the issue of an elected government in the dialogue need to understand that Prince Khalifa bin Salman -especially after the recent events- isn’t seen as just a prime minister any more. 
He became a symbol to Sunna and their dignity, a symbol to standing tall and not surrendering

What those who marginalized sunna and labeled them as thugs in the roundabout didn’t know, was that they unknowingly tied the destinies of those they eliminated together. 
When they demanded the fall of regime and that Prince Khalifa steps down, they accidently created  a “Sunni and Khalifa bin Salman” union and tied their destines together, which made the demands that the prime minister “leaves” means that sunna must leave too. 

*This post is a translation of some segment of Sawsan AL-Shaer’s article published on Sunday, June 21st, in Al-Watan newspaper.

More here

My husband was abducted by Bahrain 'security':

A personal story from Dr Ala’a Shehabi on the abduction, trial and imprisonment of her young husband on charges of actions against the nation of Bahrain.



Saturday, June 25, 2011

Honorable Moan of Bahrain protesters



Sitra today [June 25, 2011]



Human rights activist Nabeel Rajab in Sitra today [June 25, 2011]

Bahrain doctors in prison for daring to speak out
http://ping.fm/kp3fN 14feb

The Al-Khalifa Regime is Short Sighted
http://bit.ly/my3mgv Bahrain humanrights 14feb

Honorable Moan of Bahrain protesters
http://bit.ly/iSjRej 14feb

Thursday, June 23, 2011

OMG! I AM GONNA SAY IT ONCE AGAIN! THIS THING THAT HAPPENED IN BAHRAIN, HAS HAPPENED & IT WAS TERRIBLE, BUT I MEAN STOP IT! IT'S



  PEACE, LOVE & ROCK N ROLL

P.s; i never bothered out what happened but now IT IS ANNOYING !

Photo

Haven’t you heard? The phrase du jure in Bahrain is “Dialogue”. Brilliant....

Lies (Explored) by heshaaam on Flickr.

“Poor, innocent, Asian expats” is how they are now described. But just a few months ago there was little concern at a national level about the abuse of migrant workers. They represent 54% of Bahrain’s resident population, and as in the neighbouring Gulf monarchies, they constitute the bulk of the workforce. Most are from south Asia, and they are arguably the most marginalised community in the country.

Now their welfare has suddenly become a matter of concern for the regime and its apologists. After the start of the crackdown, the foreign minister scurried between the different expatriate community clubs and embassies, hailing the “strong relations bonding” them to the kingdom of Bahrain. Local state-run television suddenly started broadcasting news bulletins in Hindi, Urdu and Tagalog.



- via Spare us Bahrain’s sudden ‘concern’ for its Asian expat workers

Lies (Explored) by heshaaam on Flickr.

Bahrain / Andreas Gursky (via...



Bahrain / Andreas Gursky (via http://www.matthewmarks.com/artists/andreas-gursky/selected-works/)

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Bahrain opposition activists jailed for life

[Guardian] Bahrain, Syria and Middle East unrest - live updates[Al-Jazeera] Life sentences for Bahrain dissidents :

Protesters take to the streets, clashing with police after eight Shia activists are given life sentences.

[NPR] Bahrain Sentences Shiite Activists To Life In PrisonBahrain opposition activists jailed for life

[Guardian] Bahrain rights activists jailed for life

Bahrain unrest: Eight Shia activists sentenced to life:

Bahrain has sentenced eight Shia pro-democracy activists to life in jail for “plotting to overthrow the government”, the state news agency says.

They were among 21 opposition figures tried by a special security court. Others got sentences of up to 15 years.

Ahead of the verdict, their supporters blocked roads and staged rallies.

Bahrain’s mainly Shia protesters have been calling for democratic reforms and more rights for the country’s Shia majority in the Sunni-ruled kingdom.

They have long complained of systematic discrimination, and point to high unemployment, poor housing and the fact that they are denied high-level positions in government departments.

A wave of peaceful protests swept the country in February and March, but they were put down by force by the government, which called in troops from neighbouring Gulf states. Emergency law was only lifted on 1 June.

Correspondents say the sentencing threatens to re-ignite simmering tensions in the tiny Gulf state.

Read More: BBC News

Bahrain's crackdown: Out of the streets into the courts:

Eight activists are given life sentences and hundreds more face trial and torture



Durrat Al Bahrain is the largest artificial islands in Al Bahrain  after the Amwaj Islands, the island is composed of 13 series of artificial island with an area of about 20 million square meters with a 6 and 5 fish-shaped island crescent-shaped island. Facilities at the Durrat Al Bahrain is so complete, there are five-star hotel, an extensive golf course, 12 bridges. The marina is developed by a joint venture between Durrat Khaleej Al Bahrain and Tameer, one of the GCC region’s leading developers. The marina development is the first of its kind in the Middle East, based on the type and size.

[source]

A perspective from space can be found here.

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Bahraini protesters poured back to the streets Wednesday after a security court sentenced eight Shiite activists to life in prison in the latest blow by the Western-backed kingdom to cripple the biggest Arab Spring opposition movement in the Gulf.

The fast and angry reaction to the verdicts — the most significant display of unrest in weeks — underscored the volatility in the island nation after four months of unrest and raised questions about whether any credible pro-reform leaders will heed calls by the Sunni monarchy to open talks next week.

In size, Bahrain is little more than a speck off the coast of Saudi Arabia. But it draws in some of the region’s major players: hosting the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet and serving as a growing point of friction between Gulf powers Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Security forces used tear gas to drive back hundreds of Shiite marchers trying to reach a central square in the capital Manama, which was once the hub of their protests for greater rights. In other Shiite areas, protesters gathered in the streets but were held back by riot police. No injuries were reported.

Bahrain has allowed two major rallies this month by the main opposition party, but the confrontations Wednesday were among the biggest challenges to security forces since martial law-style rule was lifted June 1.

Shiites account for 70 percent of Bahrain’s population of some 525,000, but claim they face systematic discrimination such as being barred from top government and political posts.

The protests — claiming at least 31 lives since February — have put U.S. officials in the difficult position of both denouncing the violence and standing by Bahrain’s rulers and their call for dialogue. In response, opposition groups have increased demands that include an end to the political trials and withdrawal of a Saudi-led regional force helping prop up Bahrain’s ruling family.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Mark Toner said the U.S. was “concerned about the severity” of the sentences and the use of the military-linked security courts. He noted that President Barack Obama said in May that “such steps are at odds with the universal rights of Bahrain’s citizens.”

“We continue to urge the Bahraini government to abide by its commitment to transparent judicial proceedings, conducted in full accordance with Bahrain’s international legal obligations, and to create the conditions for a meaningful, inclusive and credible dialogue,” he said.

Bahrain’s government said in statement late Wednesday that the convicted activists were responsible for “bringing the country to the brink of total anarchy” with a wave of marches and sit-ins earlier this year.

“Today’s sentencing sends a message that law and order will be preserved,” the statement said, pledging to guard against “attempts to overthrow the regime.”

The official Bahrain News Agency said those sentenced to life include prominent Shiite political figures Hassan Mushaima and Abdul Jalil al-Singace and rights activist Abdulhadi al-Khawaja. Mushaima returned from self-exile in London earlier this year after Bahrain’s leaders promised to erase old charges of opposing the state.

Pro-reform activist Ibrahim Sharif — the only Sunni among the suspects — received five years in prison, while other sentences ranged from two to 15 years. The sentences can be appealed.

A leading opposition figure cast doubt on whether talks can get under way.

“We should conduct the dialogue in an open atmosphere, not when people are being arrested,” said Khalil al-Marzooq, who was among the 18 Shiite parliament members who staged a mass resignation to protest the crackdowns earlier this year.

The charges at the latest security court trial show the depths of the tensions. The activists were convicted of trying to overthrow Bahrain’s 200-year-old monarchy and having links to “a terrorist organization abroad” — an obvious reference to claims that Iranian-backed Hezbollah is behind the unrest.

Eight received life sentences while 13 others received shorter prison terms apparently because they weren’t considered leaders.

Bahrain’s rulers fear that any Shiite gains in the country could open new footholds for influence by Shiite power Iran.

Shiite leaders in Bahrain repeatedly have denied any ties to Iran and accuse leaders of using the fears of Iranian string-pulling to wage crackdowns that have included hundreds of arrests and purges from jobs and universities.

Fourteen of the 21 convicted are in custody while the rest were sentenced in absentia by the security court, which uses military prosecutors and a military-civilian tribunal. Among the life sentences, however, all but one of the suspects was in Bahrain.

Sharif’s wife, Farida Ghulam, said her husband cried out “Our people demand freedom” after the sentences were read.

Ghulam said al-Khawaja then shouted: “We will continue our struggle.” His daughter, Zainab, was dragged from court by female guards after she yelled “Allahu akbar,” or “God is great,” said Ghulam.

The verdicts could also bring some direct diplomatic fallout. At least two of those sentenced to life also hold European passports: al-Khawaja, who is a Danish citizen, and Mohammed Habib al-Muqdad, who has Swedish citizenship.

The court has presided over a series of cases linked to the protests, including issuing two death sentences against men accused of killing police officers during the demonstrations. Earlier this month, it sentenced a 20-year-old woman to a year in prison for reading poetry critical of Bahrain’s king.

Next week, a trial is scheduled to resume for more than 30 doctors and nurses accused of supporting the protests. Some of the medical personnel claim they were abused while in custody.

___

Associated Press writers Matthew Lee in Washington and Barbara Surk in Dubai contributed to this report.

[BBC] Bahrain unrest: Eight Shia activists sentenced to life[Guardian] Bahrain rights activists jailed for life:

Military court finds eight campaigners guilty of plotting coup during protests in Sunni-ruled kingdom

Bahrain: 21 Rights activists and political opposition leaders jailed, some for life

police state terrorism

Written by Stephen Lendman


Date: June 23, 2011

Bahrain Sues to Suppress Police State Terror Truths - by Stephen Lendman


On June 14, London Independent writer Robert Fisk headlined, “I saw these brave doctors trying to save lives - these charges are a pack of lies,” saying:

The Khalifa monarchy “started an utterly fraudulent trial of 48 surgeons, doctors, paramedics and nurses, accusing them of trying to topple the tin-pot monarchy of this Sunni minority emirate.”

One of many Bahrain articles addressed this topic, accessed through the following link:

http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2011/06/torturing-bahraini-doctors.html

Fisk said he witnessed medical heroism firsthand, “drenched in their patients’ blood, desperately trying to staunch the bullet wounds of pro-democracy demonstrators, shot in cold blood” by state security force thugs, a Khalifa monarchy specialty.

“The idea that (these doctors) are guilty of (state crimes) is not just preposterous. It is insane, a total perversion, (the) total opposite (of) truth….(Bahrain is) a Saudi palatinate, a confederated province of Saudi Arabia, a pocket-sized weasel state from which all journalists should in future use the dateline: Manama, Occupied Bahrain.”

On June 15, Independent writer Richard Hall headlined, “Bahrain ‘to sue over Independent reporting,’ ” saying:

The Khalifa monarchy “commissioned a UK-based law firm to file a case against The Independent for its reporting on the crackdowns on (internal) protests….”

Mainly directed against Fisk’s article, it also claims that:

“using columns, features and news to publish misinformation in repeated attacks on our people and rulers amounts to libel and will be treated as such in accordance with the law.”

The monarchy, of course, spurns international law and its own constitution, reigning daily terror since mid-February on pro-democracy supporters. In fact, every imaginable barbarity is being inflicted, including Obama administration supported cold-blooded murder, mass arrests, detentions, torture, and bogusly charging medical providers helping victims with baseless crimes.

Lawyers for London contributor David Banks asked, “Can Bahrain’s government sue the Independent for libel?” saying:

If it succeeds, it will defy “the well-established principle that governments cannot sue for libel,” instituted in 1993 by the House of Lords in the Derbyshire County Council v. Times newspapers case.

Two Times articles “questioned the propriety of investments for the Council’s superannuation fund. The authority sued for libel for the damage done to its reputation.” The lower court denied it. The Council appealed. Dismissing it, the House of Lords said:

“It was of the highest importance that a democratically elected governmental body should be open to uninhibited public criticism, and since the threat of civil actions for defamation would place an undesirable fetter on the freedom to express such criticism, it would be contrary to the public interest for institutions of central or local government to have any right at common law to maintain an action for damages for defamation.”

Since then, central and local governments weren’t able to sue for libel, knowing they’d be denied. However, Banks cautioned that Britain’s libel principle applies to UK “democratic governments,” not police state monarchies like Bahrain, dismissing legal standards to further their own lawlessness with impunity.

Nonetheless, it would “set a curious precedent” if British courts let UK libel laws protect unelected despots, but not their own governmental bodies.

However, while authorities themselves can’t sue, individuals may do so even if governments fund them. As a result, a Bahraini minister, perhaps one or more royal family members, or King Hamad, could file libel charges on their own, whether or not it could work. Facing incontrovertible evidence, that very much is in doubt.

Moreover, the “Reynolds defence” would apply - namely, that “The Independent was responsibly and fairly reporting matters of the highest public interest.”

Perhaps Bahrain aims more to intimidate than prevail by pursuing expensive proceedings it can afford better than publications, giving others pause on what they say.

Islamic Human Rights Commission (IHRC) on Bahrain

On June 15, an IHRC action alert headlined, “Bahrain to Chair UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee whilst destroying its own heritage,” saying:

On June 19, Bahrain began chairing the 35th Session of The World Heritage Committee of UNESCO in Paris. At the same time, it’s been demolishing mosques, as well as ravaging its Shia majority with impunity.

Moreover, the Khalifa monarchy has systematically destroyed Bahrain’s culture for decades, including old buildings, palm tree huts, other traditions, and 21 ancient licensed mosques, including one over 640 years old.

Its membership on the World Heritage Committee is outrageous. Chairing it is intolerable. Write to Irina Bokova, UNESCO’s Director-General demanding its removal, expulsion, and censure for its actions.

Bahrain Expels Independent Journalist

On June 18, Finian Cunningham was deported for reporting critically on Bahraini abuses, despite living there for three years and covering the uprising from its mid-February inception.

In a June 12 interview, he said the monarchy’s call for “national dialogue” was hollow, cynical public relations, while reigning terror on its citizens. He also criticized Washington and Britain for turning a blind eye to its brazen abuses, including cold-blooded murder, torture, lawless arrests, and sham trials against innocent defendants.

Now in Belfast, he said:

“My lasting impression of Bahrain is not the brutish nation of its illegitimate rulers, but the bravery and decency of its ordinary men, women, and youths in their noble struggle for freedom.”

The night he left, he witnessed 150,000 in Sitra demanding legitimate freedoms. Despite months of police state terror, “(t)he people are stronger than ever and are more determined than ever to bring democracy and freedom to Bahrain.”

Western media and governments barely notice or care, supporting ruthless terror states like Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Bahrain and many others, instead of condemning, isolating, sanctioning, and ending diplomatic and economic relations.

Bahrain also threatens arrests and prosecutions for anyone speaking freely with media sources regarding human rights abuses and denial of democratic freedoms. As a result, persons appearing on camera or known to speak openly face severe recriminations.

In fact, CNN reporter Amber Lyon said sources who spoke to her later disappeared, their family members explaining they’d been arrested or forced into hiding after security forces raided their homes and threatened them. Yet Article 10 of Bahrain’s Human Rights Act says:

“(E)veryone has the right of freedom expression. This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers.”

The Khalifa monarchy, in fact, spurns fundamental human rights, governing despotically, targeting anyone challenging its authority ruthlessly.

On June 20, Independent writer Alistair Dawber headlined, “Bahraini leadership faces new claims that torture took place in hospital,” saying:

Doctors Without Borders (Medicins Sans Frontieres - MSF) “alleges that (state) security forces…. regularly beat hospital patients who had injuries….sustained during the rallies that started in February.”

MSF, in fact, confirmed the existence of “a torture chamber maintained by Bahraini forces within the hospital. And it provide(d) fresh evidence that retribution was not limited to the alleged ringleaders of the protests.”

A Bahraini surgeon’s March 15 email to the British professor who trained him said:

“I am in the hospital exhausted and overwhelmed by the number of young lethally injured casualties. It’s genocide to our people and our hospital doctors and nurses are targeted for helping patients by pro-government militia.”

Two days later, Bahraini security force thugs stormed the hospital, reigning terror on pro-democracy patients and medical providers helping them.

On June 20, Bahrain 14Feb. Revolution said mentally disabled Hassan Nooh was maliciously held incommunicado for over two years.

On March 28, security forces stormed Nooh Yahya Abdalqahir’s home. He was out, and Hassan there at the time was seized to force his surrender. On March 29, Abdalqahir submitted to arrest. Hassan remains in custody. Family members know nothing, expressing concern because he can’t care for himself.

On June 19, Bahrain 14Feb. Revolution also said 70-year old Hasan Al-Sitri was murdered while walking in the Nuwaidrat area. Evidence showed his neck broken and a large wound on his back.

Bahrain’s Interior Ministry issued conflicting reports. One said he died naturally, another that he was struck with a heavy object, and a third that he fell during a confrontation with three men, hitting his head on rocks.

The Ministry also demanded family members sign a death certificate, claiming his death was “normal.” They refused, wanting an autopsy. It confirmed death from two blows with heavy objects, causing severe neck fractures.

A Final Comment

Bahrain is a lawless terror state. Its people wanting to live free are brutalized. Western media hardly notice. Washington offers wholehearted support. In early June, Obama met with crown prince Salman bin Hamad al-Khalifa at the White House, the equivalent of welcoming a serial killer.

Afterwards he met with Hillary Clinton. She called Bahrain “a partner, and a very important one….and we are supportive of a national dialogue and the kinds of important work that the Crown Prince has been doing in his nation, and we look forward to it continuing.”

Unexplained was her support for preventing Bahraini democracy, no matter the body count to achieve it.

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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Bahrain has sentenced eight prominent activists to life in prison on charges of plotting a coup in the country during protests earlier this year.

The Bahrain News Agency said the sentences were issued against a prominent Shia political leader, Hassan Mushaima; activists Abdulhady al-Khawaja, Abduljalil al-Singace and five other people.

The court also sentenced several other defendants to between two and 15 years in jail.

The state news agency reports: 

The Military Prosecutor of the National Safety Court issued the Court’s verdicts in its trial today against those charged of plotting to topple the leadership of the Kingdom of Bahrain. 

Al Jazeera English spoke to Nabeel Rajab, president of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, who said many people are unhappy about the sentences. 

AJE reports: 

“Abdulhady al-Khawaja is one of the most respected human rights activist in the whole Arab region, so people are very angry,” Rajab said.

“Hundreds of people have been brought up for charges in the past few days, and hundreds more are waiting to be tried.”

Read the rest of the AJE article here.

Bahrain: 21 Rights activists and political opposition leaders jailed, some for life:

Eight Bahraini rights activists have been given life sentences by a military court, which found them guilty of plotting a coup against the government during two months of unrest that rattled the country earlier this year.

Another 13 [political and rights activists] were given sentences of between two to 15 years, as the government attempts to crush dissent that has erupted in the tiny kingdom in February following popular uprisings elsewhere in the Arab world.

The verdicts were immediately condemned by rights groups who said all those found guilty had been campaigning to end discrimination at the hands of the Sunni dynasty. Almost all activists who took to the streets of Manama in February and March were Shia Muslims, who make up 70% of Bahrain’s population, but feel largely disenfranchised.

Rights groups have urged Bahrain to halt the special military court proceedings, with Human Rights Watch deeming them a violation of international law.

Friday, June 17, 2011

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