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ADHRB Weekly Newsletter #385
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Bahrain

Bahrain: Joint Letter to EU Ahead of Meeting With Bahraini Delegation

Re: EU-Bahrain Cooperation Agreement Must Depend on Human Rights Improvements

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Joseph Borrell, High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy / Vice-President of the European Commission

Eamon Gilmore, EU Special Representative for Human Rights

Your Excellencies,

In light of the meeting between Bahrain’s Minister of Foreign Affairs and the European External Action Service currently scheduled to take place in Brussels on 10 february 2021, we are writing to raise concerns about the deterioration of the human rights situation in Bahrain, following a year in which Human Rights Watch reports that the Bahraini government has “escalated repression” against critics.

As the informal EU-Bahrain Human Rights Dialogue originally scheduled for November 2020 has been indefinitely postponed, it is vital that human rights concerns are placed at the center of your conversations with Bahraini officials during this upcoming meeting.

Bahrain’s Crackdown on Political Opposition and Civil Society

Bahrain’s February 2011 Arab Spring uprising was an event which many hoped would herald a new era of democracy in the country. However, since the government’s violent suppression of the protests, promised reforms have failed to materialise. The leaders of the protest movement, some of them now elderly, continue to languish in prison.

Read the full article here



Irish MEP Tabled Questions about the Plight of Political Prisoners in Bahrain

MEP Chris MacManus submitted a written question to the European Commission. His question was submitted to Mr. Joseph Borrell, the High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy/Vice-President of the European Commission. Americans for Democracy & Human Rights in Bahrain (ADHRB) welcomes these parliamentary questions and thanks MEP Chris MacManus for bringing attention to the ongoing human rights abuses and the plight of imprisoned human rights defenders and political activists in Bahrain.

MEP MacManus asked:

“1. In the EU’s discussions with the Bahraini Government, will the Vice-President of the Commission/High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy ask Bahrain whether it will agree to a joint EU-Bahraini initiative to review cases of political prisoners sentenced in unfair mass trials, investigate allegations of torture and ill-treatment, and repeal recent decrees punishing those who criticise government policies or call for democratic transformation?

Will he also urge the Bahraini Government to give political prisoners with severe health problems, such as Hassan Mushaima and Abduljalil al-Singace, access to medical treatment?”


On 1 February 2021, High Representative Borell sent back the following written response:

“The EU has systematically raised its concerns related to the right to fair trial, prohibition of torture and ill-treatment, arbitrary detentions and mass trials with Bahraini authorities through regular political contacts, both from Headquarters as well as via the EU Delegation in Riyadh (accredited to Manama). The most recent informal EU-Bahraini Human Rights dialogue held on 7 November 2019 in Brussels offered another opportunity to discuss these topics as well as prison conditions and the access to adequate healthcare by prisoners in Bahrain.

Read the full article here

Profile in Persecution

AbdulNabi AbdulHasan Khalil (Al-Sammak)

48-year-old AbdulNabi AbdulHasan Khalil, also known as AbdulNabi Al-Sammak, was a security guard at the Ministry of Education in Bahrain when he was arbitrarily arrested by the Bahraini authorities on 3 September 2020 because of reciting Ziyarat Ashura during the first 10 days of Muharram. He was sentenced to one year in prison later after being charged with publicly insulting symbols and persons subject to glorification among people who follow the Islamic faith. He is currently detained in Jau Prison.

AbdulNabi was summoned for investigation three times because of reciting Ziyarat Ashura, a Shia prayer that is widely used and found in officially registered books in Bahrain, Gulf states, and other Muslim countries, during the first ten days of Muharram, which is the period of Ashura, a commemoration of the martyrdom of Imam Husain. His lawyer was prohibited from attending the interrogations. On 3 September 2020, after being subject to interrogation at Al-Naeem Police Station, authorities arrested AbdulNabi there without presenting to him any arrest warrant. Authorities justified his arrest by accusing him of insulting and cursing the Companions of the Prophet while reciting Ziyarat Ashura at Matam AlSamakeen in Manama throughout the period of Ashura, even though legitimate religious institutions confirm that the four individuals referred to in the prayer do not represent any of the Companions of the Prophet. On that same day, he was able to meet his family after his arrest. However, he has not been able to meet them again since then. Three days after his detention at Al-Naeem police station, he was transferred to Al-Hoora police station, where he was interrogated for four days, before being transferred to the Dry Dock Detention Center.

Read the full article here

GCC in the Wire

 

 

Jailed Saudi activist Loujain al-Hathloul expected to be released (Al Jazeera) 

Saudi women’s rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul is expected to be released from prison on Thursday after more than 1,000 days in detention.

- Women in Kuwait launch online campaign against harassment (Al Jazeera)

Women in Kuwait are defying conservative norms and a culture of “shame” to speak out against harassment for the first time, in a social media campaign sparked by a popular fashion blogger.

- Biden revokes terrorist designation for Yemen’s Houthis (AP)

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden’s administration is moving to revoke the designation of Yemen’s Houthis as a terrorist group, citing the need to mitigate one of the world’s worst humanitarian disasters.

- Three Saudi youths get prison sentence instead of death (AP)

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Three young Saudi men who faced death sentences for acts they were accused of committing as minors have been handed a 10-year prison sentence instead, the Saudi Human Rights Commission said.

- Biden administration expects Saudi Arabia to improve human rights - White House (Reuters)

WASHINGTON, Feb 5 (Reuters) - The United State expects Saudi Arabia to improve its human right record, including releasing political prisoners, White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki said on Friday.

- Saudi Arabia frees two jailed activists with U.S. citizenship on bail (Reuters)

DUBAI (Reuters) - Saudi authorities have released two activists with U.S. citizenship on bail pending their trials, rights groups and family members said, as the kingdom moves to address criticism from the new U.S. administration over its human rights records.

 
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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