Crackdown on rights activists in Bahrain

Hend Kortam
4 Min Read
Human rights activist Nabeel Rajab, on his knees, was detained by Bahraini police during a peaceful protest (Photo: Bahrain Centre for Human Rights)
Human rights activist Nabeel Rajab, on his knees, was detained by Bahraini police during a peaceful protest
(Photo: Bahrain Centre for Human Rights)

Nabeel Rajab, the Bahraini human rights defender already sentenced to three months in prison was sentenced to an additional three years on Thursday for three cases of taking part in unauthorised gatherings, according to the Bahraini Alwasat News.

Rajab is head of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights (BCHR), director of the Gulf Centre for Human Rights (GCHR) and is currently behind bars for a tweet he published criticising the Bahraini government. He appealed the three month sentence he received for the tweet in July but the court has postponed the appeals case hearing to 23 August, according to Alwasat News.

The sentence has been condemned by several rights groups including the Cairo-based Arabic Network for Human Rights Information (ANHRI), Front Line Defenders, and the BCHR and the GCHR, both of which ran a statement on their websites strongly condemning the sentencing which they state was issued against Rajab because of his “legitimate and peaceful human rights work.”

The BCHR and the GCHR both called on the United States, the European Union, United Kingdom and human rights organisations to call for the release of Rajab and other human rights advocates Abdulhadi Alkhawaja and his daughter Zainab Alkhawaja and to increase pressure on the Bahraini government to halt human rights violations.

Rajab’s wife and two children, Sumaya Rajab, sent an open letter this week to the United Nations and international human rights organisations demanding Rajab’s release and an end to harassment of him and his family.

On Wednesday, another human rights advocate, Said Yousif Almuhafda, was arrested after taking part in protests demanding Rajab’s release.

“I was accused of taking pictures of a checkpoint and I was beaten by traffic police and insulted after which I was taken to a police station where they interrogated me and released after they asked me to sign a pledge saying that I will go to the police station if they ask me to,” Almuhafda told the Daily News Egypt. Almuhafda had to sign the statement without his lawyer present.

Almuhafda said that what hurt him most was that it happened in front of his two daughters, aged three and five, who were crying at the time.

His arrest was condemned by the European Bahraini Organisation for Human Rights which called it an “arbitrary arrest.”

Almuhafda told the Daily News Egypt that he was expecting a different outcome in Rajab’s trial, “I expect him to be released especially after calls from tens of international organisations and the 19 US Congressmen, but anything might change.

“The continual arrests of activists and refusal to release them shows that the regime will continue its policy of targeting activists.”

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