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ADHRB Weekly Newsletter #378
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Bahrain

  
22 Rights groups urge Asian Bloc to oppose Bahrain’s bid for Human Rights Council 

On 1 December 2020, 22 rights groups including Americans for Democracy and Human Rights in Bahrain (ADHRB), the Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD) and the International Service for Human Rights (ISHR) have written to the Asia and the Pacific bloc at the UN Human Rights Council (HRC) calling on member states to oppose Bahrain’s bid for the Presidency on the grounds that its poor human rights record and refusal to cooperate with UN mechanisms would “fundamentally undermine the integrity of the Council.”

The letter documents a “systematic violation of human rights” by Bahrain’s government since Bahrain occupied a seat at the HRC in 2018. In particular, signatories point to a dramatic rise in the use of the death penalty following the cessation of a moratorium in 2017, a “sustained attack” on the free press, including on social media, and the use of torture and unfair trials against opposition figures.

Signatories also highlight Bahrain’s “systematic” reprisals against activists and human rights defenders (HRDs) for cooperating with UN human rights mechanisms through “arbitrary arrest, abuse and ill treatment” as well as “travel bans” and citizenship revocation. The letter noted a 2020 report by UN Secretary General documenting reprisals against prominent HRDs including Nabeel Rajab, Ebtisam Al Saegh and BIRD’s Director Sayed Ahmed Alwadaei, family members of whom remain imprisoned in what the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention deem to be “acts of reprisal.”

Noting that Bahrain’s membership in HRC Council mandates states to “fully cooperate with the Council,” the letter concluded by condemning Bahrain’s refusal to permit UN Special Rapporteurs or the UN High Commissioner access to the country since 2006. As a consequence, signatories “strongly recommend that states of the Asian Pacific Group vote against Bahrain’s bid for the presidency.”

Read the full article here

Profile in Persecution

 

Ali Hasan Tooq

Ali Hasan Tooq was an 18-year-old high school student in grade 10 when he was arbitrarily arrested by the Bahraini authorities on 6 November 2019. During his detention, he was subjected to several human rights violations. Ali is currently detained at the Dry Dock Detention Center, and he will soon be transferred to the New Dry Dock Prison, which is specifically for inmates below 21 years of age.

At 3:00 a.m. on 6 November 2019, riot forces, security police forces, officers from the Criminal Investigation Directorate (CID), as well as officers in civilian clothing raided the home of Ali’s family and broke into it without presenting any arrest or search warrant. They then entered the rooms while the family members were asleep, before heading to Ali’s room and arresting him after stripping him from his clothes and confiscating all family members’ phones. They also threatened him, hoping he would join them as an informant.

After his arrest, Ali’s family went to the CID to ask about their son. They were told that he was present there but that they were prohibited from meeting him and must therefore wait for a call from him. Two weeks after his detention at the CID, Ali was able to make a prompt call with his family for the first time to inform them of his whereabouts. He also told them that he was fine and that he was detained at the CID.

Read the full article here

GCC in the Wire

 

- Yemen: Eight civilians killed in Hodeidah shelling (Al Jazeera)

At least eight people have been killed in shelling of an industrial compound in Yemen’s strategic port of Hodeidah, according to the government which blamed Houthi rebels for the attack.

- Hunger surges to record levels in war-torn Yemen: UN (France 24)

Malnutrition in conflict-hit Yemen has reached record levels, narrowing the window of opportunity to prevent a famine, the UN said Thursday, as the coronavirus and funding shortfalls threaten a humanitarian perfect storm.

- Qatar rules out normalization of Israel ties for now (AP)

ROME (AP) — Qatar’s foreign minister said Friday that his country remains committed to the creation of a Palestinian state with its capital in east Jerusalem, and that progress on that front would need to be “at the core” of any agreement to normalize relations with Israel.

- Saudi Arabia says end to yearslong Qatar boycott ‘in reach’ (AP)

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Saudi Arabia’s top diplomat said Friday that an end to the yearslong boycott of Qatar by the kingdom and three other Arab nations “looks in reach” for all involved, though he offered no details on how this feud would be resolved.

- Qatar foreign min says there has been movement on resolving Gulf dispute (Reuters)

DUBAI, Dec 4 (Reuters) - Qatar’s foreign minister said on Friday that there has been movement on resolving a bitter diplomatic dispute among the Gulf countries but that he could not predict whether a breakthrough was imminent or would fully resolve the matter.

- U.S. considering blacklist for Yemen's Houthis - Oman foreign minister (Reuters)

DUBAI (Reuters) - Oman’s foreign minister said on Saturday the top U.S. diplomat for the Middle East had discussed with his country the possibility of Washington designating Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthi movement as a terrorist group.

 
Are you a victim of a human rights abuse in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, or other GCC states?

Document your case with the Special Procedures of the United Nations through 
ADHRB's UN Complaint Program.
Copyright © 2017 ADHRB, All rights reserved.
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