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ADHRB Weekly Newsletter #390
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Bahrain

ADHRB launches joint report, “Patterns of Torture in Bahrain: Perpetrators must Face Justice”

The Americans for Democracy & Human Rights in Bahrain (ADHRB) in co-operation with its human rights partners Gulf Centre for Human Rights (GCHR), the Bahrain Center for Human Rights (BCHR), International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), and World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT), will launch a report entitled, “Patterns of Torture in Bahrain: Perpetrators must Face Justice.” The launch will take place during an online side event at the United Nations Human Rights Council’s 46th session at 2pm Geneva time On March 17th at this link on zoom.

Drawing on first-hand witness statements by survivors of torture, the report is a comprehensive study on the specific ways and means by which torture is perpetrated in Bahrain, with a particular focus on the period since the 2011 popular movement and the violent crackdown that followed. The report not only seeks to describe how torture in perpetrated in Bahrain, it goes one step further by examining the concrete steps that need to be taken at domestic and international level to end the culture of impunity that facilitates the use of torture and prevents accountability.

Read the full article here
 


 

ADHRB raises the Spread of Culture of Impunity in Bahrain at the Human Rights Council

We would like to thank the mandates of the Special Procedures for their work; and raise concerns about poor conditions in Bahraini prisons. As well as ongoing religious discrimination, reprisals, impunity, and police brutality in Bahrain. Just a quick look at the joint communication reports on Bahrain shows ongoing systematic human rights violations in Bahrain and it’s lack of serious or constructive cooperation with the UN mechanism.

In this regard we would like to point to a book titled “Zafarat” published by Bahraini activists’ news agency “Bahrain Alyoum” in which scores of detailed testimonies of victims of torture and Bahraini political prisoners are documented.

One of those victims in this book is the Bahraini political prisoner Shaikh Zuhair Ashoor who was arrested for his opposition to the dictatorship in Bahrain and for charges related to freedom of expression and speech. During his detention and interrogation, he was subject to severe torture and to several human rights violations, and recently, he was subjected to enforced disappearance from 10July 2020 to 17 January 2021 during which he was subjected to various forms of torture and harassment as a form of reprisal for his stances and activism calling for the prisoners’ rights. He is currently held in Jau Prison, where he is serving his life sentence.

Read the full article here
 


 


 
EU Parliament Urgent Resolution Condemns Human Rights Situation in Bahrain

The European Parliament has voted overwhelmingly in a plenary session today to adopt an urgent resolution condemning human rights abuses in Bahrain, including an increase in the use of the death penalty, the continued use of torture against detainees and the persecution of human rights defenders, lawyers and other civil society figures, while calling on Bahrain’s government to enact reforms, the European Centre for Democracy and Human Rights (ECDHR), Americans for Democracy and Human Rights in Bahrain (ADHRB) and the Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD), stated today.

The resolution, which passed by 689 votes to 11 with 45 abstentions, represents the first major intervention by the European Parliament on human rights in Bahrain since a similar resolution was adopted in June 2018. The vote followed the signing of an agreement between EU High Representative Josep Borrell and Bahrain’s Minister for Foreign Affairs Dr Abdullatif bin Rashid Al Zayani last month aimed at promoting cooperation in “areas such as trade, research  and innovation, clean energy and renewables.”

Read the full article here

Profile in Persecution

Husain Ali Jaafar Mohamed Abdulla

Husain Abdulla was a 22-year-old preparatory student when he was warrantlessly arrested in 2016 after a raid on his uncle’s house. Husain was brutally tortured afterwards, which resulted in severe head and body injuries. Recently, his repeated requests for medical treatment have been ignored by Jau prison administration, which resulted in his appendix bursting requiring three surgical operations.

On 22 September 2016, a group of masked officers wearing black clothes and yellow T-shirts, one of whom was carrying a camera that did not have a police label, raided Husain’s uncle’s house to arrest him. When the family demanded to see a warrant, the officers threatened to arrest them. Officers also did not state the reason for the arrest.

Afterwards, Husain was taken to the investigation building of Jau prison where he was questioned for 9 days. Husain was tortured during the first 5 days of the interrogation by investigation officers and Jau prison officers who beat him all over his body and severely hit his head to extract a confession. As a result, Husain suffered from wounds and scars on the hands and legs, a head injury and deep wounds in his head causing constant headaches, and pain in the genitals to the point that he bleeds when he urinates. Eventually, Husain was forced to sign a document confessing to the charges brought upon him in order to stop the torture. His lawyer was not allowed to be present during the interrogation.

ADHRB at the UN

ADHRB at HRC 46: Bahrain engages in constant attacks against Human Rights Defenders

"We would like to bring to the attention of the council the constant repression that civil society organizations and human defenders are facing in Bahrain especially under the directive of the newly appointed prime minister and crown prince Salman bin Hamad Al-Khalifa.

The right to free expression, assembly and associations are submitted to extensive restrictions. Many of those restrictions also impacts civil society space and thus undermine the activity of CSOs.

Corruption and nepotism is another serious issue in the country; where the current prime minister and the Al-Khalifa tribe control the economy hence the wealth in the country causing majority of the population to live under poor economic conditions." [..]

GCC in the Wire

 

US legislators want sanctions on MBS. Will they succeed? (Al Jazeera)

For the four years of Donald Trump’s presidency, Saudi Arabia got a free pass from the United States. Trump not only praised Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, often referred to as MBS, but refused to punish him after U.S. intelligence agencies concluded that he had played a direct role in the 2018 murder of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi. “I saved his —,” the U.S. president later said of MBS on a taped phone call with the Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward, using a word I would rather not repeat.

Dubai: Several Indians stranded in the UAE on their way to Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, following flight suspensions in those countries last month, have returned home in batches with free tickets from the expatriate community in the UAE and the Indian Consulate in Dubai.

Bahrain police beat minors, threatened them with rape: Report (Al Jazeera)

Bahraini security forces have beaten minors and threatened them with rape and electric shocks after detaining them in protest-related cases last month, the anniversary of a 2011 pro-democracy uprising, rights groups said.

Saudi court denies activist’s appeal, upholds her travel ban ( APNews)

A court in Saudi Arabia on Wednesday denied the appeal by one of the kingdom’s most prominent political activists that would have allowed her to travel freely, her supporters said, weeks after her release from prison.

Kuwait Court Expels Harsh Government Critic From Parliament (Bloomberg)

Dubai, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- Kuwait's constitutional court ordered the country’s most outspoken opposition lawmaker expelled from parliament on Sunday, inflaming tensions between the government and legislature and revealing the limits of political freedom in the Gulf state.

 
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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