organization:bahraini government

  • Bahrain’s five-year plan of repression | Middle East Eye
    http://www.middleeasteye.net/columns/bahrain-s-five-year-plan-repression-1903103504

    By the year’s close, Bahraini authorities had revoked the citizenship of at least 208 people, showing no distinction between activists, average people, and actual terror suspects.

    Once stripped of their citizenship, these people are left with three choices: find a sponsor willing to risk government pressure, go to jail, or face exile. Simply put, the Bahraini government is now wielding citizenship as just another weapon in the fight against dissent, willfully abandoning its own people to statelessness in retaliation for free expression.

  • Group of 32 countries criticizes Bahrain’s human rights record | Reuters
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/09/14/us-bahrain-rights-idUSKCN0RE1L120150914

    The Bahraini government said 17 policeman have been killed and 3,328 wounded since 2011 in bomb attacks or violence it says was stirred up by the opposition.

    The opposition says the government is attempting to stifle free speech by jailing peaceful political dissidents.

    The letter called upon the government “to appropriately address all reports of torture and ill-treatment of detainees and ensure full investigation and prosecution of these cases”.

    It also called on the government to agree to a visit by the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Torture. In 2013, the U.N. torture investigator said Bahrain had in effect canceled a trip he had planned to the Gulf Arab state.

    Information Minister Isa Abdulrahman said that whenever individuals were questioned or imprisoned by the authorities it was due to a violation of the law and had nothing to do with freedom of expression or human rights.

  • Bahrain Orders Deportation of Ten Bahrainis after Revoking their Citizenship - AhlulBayt News Agency - ABNA - Shia News
    http://www.abna.ir/english/service/bahrain/archive/2014/11/01/648376/story.html

    Bahrain Orders Deportation of Ten Bahrainis after Revoking their Citizenship
    November 1, 2014 _ 11:31 AM
    News Code : 648376Source : BCHR
    On 28 October 2014, 10 Bahrainis, who had their citizenship revoked on 7 November 2012, were sentenced to deportation and a 100 Bahraini dinar (USD 265) fine.

    On 28 October 2014, 10 Bahrainis, who had their citizenship revoked on 7 November 2012, were sentenced to deportation and a 100 Bahraini dinar (USD 265) fine. Americans for Democracy & Human Rights in Bahrain (ADHRB), the Bahrain Center for Human Rights (BCHR) and the Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD) condemn the court’s decision and the ongoing targeting of the aforementioned individuals.

    The ten Bahrainis are part of a group of 31 who had their citizenship revoked in 2012. 18 of the individuals targeted already resided outside of Bahrain. Of the 13 remaining, Jalal and Jawad Fairooz were out of the country when the revocation was announced, which forced them into exile. The remaining 11, who resided in Bahrain, were rendered stateless. The Government of Bahrain said the 31 could file an appeal against the revocation, but they were not allowed to do so as they had no legal status as a result of the revocation of their citizenship. Only after mounting international pressure did the government permit the aforementioned individuals to appeal the revocation. In June 2013, the remaining 10 individuals who resided in Bahrain were forced to surrender their passports and identification cards to the government.

    One of the 11 Bahrainis has already been forced into exile by the Bahraini government. On 23 April 2014, Shaikh Hussain al-Najati left Bahrain after the government threatening his family with physical harm if he refused self-deportation. The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Religious Freedom condemned the harassment and described it as an act of religiously motivated discrimination.” The BCHR recently published a detailed report on the use of revocation of citizenship by the Bahraini government to target human rights defenders.

    In July of this year, the remaining individuals were forced to sign documents by the Immigration Office legally acknowledging that they were no longer Bahraini citizens, but foreign nationals who must seek a sponsor to remain in the country or face deportation. Then, on 10 August 2014, the Public Prosecution charged them under articles 111 and 64 of the Penal Code and articles 15, 28-1 and 29-2 of the Asylum and Immigration Law, with “being a foreigner in the country and breaking the Immigration and Residency Law (Foreigners Law)”.

    The aforementioned organizations call on the Government of Bahrain to:

     Immediately halt the deportation of the nine Bahrainis, which is in violation of Article 15 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights;
     Immediately reinstate the nationality of the 31 whose citizenship was revoked in 2012, and;
     Accede to the 1954 Convention relating to the Status of Stateless Persons and to the 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness.

  • Leaked Data Suggests Bahrain’s Government Hacked Its Own Fact-Finding Commission - Global Voices Advocacy
    http://advocacy.globalvoicesonline.org/2014/08/11/leaked-data-suggests-bahrains-government-hacked-its-own

    KMA is assumed to be judge Khaled Moheyuldin Ahmed, a member of the commission who is now employed by the Bahraini government. Sources confirm that Ahmed was using a Sony VAIO laptop (see above chart) during the time he worked with BICI, which coincides with the dates of infection. The other target who shares the same operation code is named Douglass and is believed to be Douglas Hansen, another member of the BICI.

    The leak contradicts Gamma’s earlier denials that it doesn’t sell its products to Bahrain. It also adds credence to suggestions of wrongdoing by London-based NGO Privacy International, which sent multiple inquiries to the UK’s customs department, asking whether the department was investigating Gamma’s export of spy technology to repressive regimes. After their requests went unanswered, they took the company to court. In May of 2014, the UK High Court ruled that the customs department acted unlawfully and “irrationally” in refusing to answer the NGO’s inquiries.

  • New #Wikileaks Revelation Exposes Big State Department Lie, This Time in Bahrain
    http://www.policymic.com/articles/81325/new-wikileaks-revelation-exposes-big-state-department-lie-this-time-in-ba

    #John_Timoney has a face like a fist and a CV out of The Departed. He’s been a cop in New York, Miami and Philadelphia. And now he’s advising the Bahraini government on policing matters.

    That’s the Bahraini government, the one that gases, tortures and kills protesters as their preferred method of public order policing. And that’s Timoney, who’s been called “the worst cop in America” and faced hundreds of complaints over his violent approach to public order policing in the U.S.

    The State Department has always insisted Timoney’s appointment in Bahrain has nothing to do with them. The distancing is deliberate — human rights groups are scrutinizing the repressive regime closely.

    (...)

    An email has turned up on Wikileaks http://search.wikileaks.org/gifiles/?viewemailid=85406 showing the job opportunity that Timoney eventually took when he was promoted by an American “Regional Security Officer” who was stationed at the Bahrain Embassy five months before Timoney was appointed.

    #Bahrein #droits_humains #Etats-Unis #menteurs

  • #Bahrain suspends “national dialogue” with opposition
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/bahrain-suspends-national-dialogue-opposition

    The Bahraini government has suspended a #National_Dialogue with opposition groups aimed at ending nearly three years of political deadlock in the US-allied country, raising the prospect of further instability. The opposition has boycotted the talks for months over the arrest of some of their leaders including their top chief Ali Salman last month, with prospects for a solution on the horizon looking bleak. read more

    #Al-Wefaq #Top_News

  • U.S. State Department Requests $10m for 2014 Bahrain Military Assistance: The State Department requested $11.1 million in foreign assistance to Bahrain, $10 million of which is allocated to foreign military financing to sustain the 85-90 percent of the Bahrain Defense Force’s equipment that is of U.S. origin. Bahrain’s ongoing political and social unrest “underlines the importance of the Bahraini government addressing its citizens’ demands for political reform” for both Bahrain’s internal stability and “for the sustainability of the U.S.-Bahraini decades-long security partnership.” The United States will continue to protect its interests and “leverage all tools available, including foreign assistance, to encourage Bahrain’s leadership to implement democratic reforms and adhere to human rights standards…”

    http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/208291.pdf

  • Une première dans les politiques golfiennes d’importation des universités : la demande d’ONG de retirer l’accréditation du Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland- Bahrein

    BBC News - Irish medical campus in Bahrain challenged
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-22703138

    Ceartas/Irish Lawyers for Human Rights argues in a detailed report that the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI) campus in the Bahraini capital of Manama falls within Irish jurisdiction as it is wholly owned by its parent organisation RCSI in Dublin.

    RCSI invested nearly 100m euros (£86m) in building the campus in 2009 at the Medical University of Bahrain, on land donated by the Bahraini government.

    Ceartas says the Medical Council of Ireland (MCI) should withhold accreditation to RCSI-Bahrain because the college has “an education programme integrated with health systems connected to torture, discriminatory conduct in the provision of healthcare and employment of medical staff, and consistent violation of the rights to freedom of expression”.

  • Une nouvelle étude destinée à contrer l’allégation de l’opposition bahreinienne selon laquelle les chiites sont discriminés dans leur accès à l’emploi (texte 1) et sa critique scientifique par Justin Gengler sur son blog (texte 2).

    1)
    Gulf Daily News » Local News » Opposition’s ’lies’ bared
    http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=352829

    ALLEGATIONS that Bahrain’s Shi’ite community suffers from economic discrimination have been disputed in a report compiled by an independent expert, who accuses opposition groups of lying about the extent of hardships being faced.

    The study was carried out over 18 months by Prague-based Metropolitan University Department of International Relations and European Studies founder and head Dr Mitchell Belfer, who is putting together a book on Bahrain.

    He embarked on the project following opposition claims that the country’s Shi’ite community was underrepresented, excluded from economic life, experienced inequality in pay and was more likely to be unemployed.

    However, his results led him to accuse anti-government activists of engaging in “demographic slander” by twisting facts to suit their agenda, undermine the government and incite sectarianism.

    The “Demographic Warfare” report was compiled based on staff data at six government ministries, five government agencies, 17 high-income sectors, five banks, 10 major employers and 10 top Shi’ite-owned firms.

    Dr Belfer’s research indicated there was equal representation of Shia and Sunni in the economy, with Shi’ite staff massively outnumbering the Sunni workforce in several ministries and agencies, as well as in some of the country’s largest private organisations.

    He also alleged discrimination against Sunni Muslims by 10 major Shi’ite-owned companies, which he said employed 2,648 people in total.

    The study found that an average of 98.1pc of staff at those firms were Shi’ite, although the research did not document levels of Shi’ite employment in Sunni-owned companies.

    “Such statistics only seek to show that the theory of economic desperation and disempowerment is false,” says the report by Dr Belfer, who is also the editor-in-chief of the Central European Journal of International and Security Studies (CEJISS).

    The report also disputes allegations by opposition groups such as Al Wefaq National Islamic Society that Bahrain was trying to reduce the footprint of the Shi’ite population by granting Bahraini citizenship to expats - arguing that immigrants were being unfairly politicised by such claims.

    “Few have truly sought to learn about the people who are being politicised for nothing more than gaining Bahraini nationality through the many channels open to immigrants; asylum seekers, economic migrants, regular immigrants, etc,” says the report.

    "Despite the near deafening depiction that immigrants are mercenaries working to suppress the ’majority Shia’, most immigrants to Bahrain - over the past century - are hardly Sunni zealots seeking to eliminate the country’s Shia; they tend to be either the politically vanquished or the economically downtrodden.

    "They come from around the world; the Philippines, Kurdistan, Eritrea, Sudan, Turkey, Western Europe and the US and, for the past century, they have steadily come from India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Baluchistan and from throughout the Middle East.

    “It is on this last destination that pause for reflection is most needed since the cases of Palestinian and Syrian immigrants to Bahrain clearly demonstrate that Bahrain’s immigration policy is not intended to alter the demographic situation on the ground - it has already been widely acknowledged by the Bahraini government that Bahrainis, Shia and Sunni, are the minority in the country - but is designed in a way to provide political safety and economic opportunity for those that require it most.”

    Although Dr Belfer’s report does not cover staffing at the Defence Ministry and Interior Ministry, it describes allegations that the Shi’ite community is disenfranchised as false and states such allegations only serve to polarise society.

    “There is clear evidence that Shia Bahrainis enjoy the distribution of economic benefits from many of the country’s key sectors and industries,” it says.

    The report warns of the dangers of trying to misrepresent employment opportunities for the Shi’ite community in Bahrain and advises members of the public to challenge such claims by opposition groups.

    “It is not prudent to simply allow demographic slander to go unchecked, these lines of argumentation need to be openly challenged not for Bahrain as a state, but for the very people who live within it, those who found shelter, safety and security in the Kingdom, who call it home while Al Wefaq calls them strangers and mercenaries,” it says.

    It also highlights the dangers of assuming that all members of the Shi’ite community are opponents of the government, particularly since many Bahraini Shia of Persian descent (known as the Ajam) are loyal to the ruling family after their ancestors were welcomed in Bahrain.

    In addition, the report refutes the notion that Bahrain is a country divided between Sunni and Shi’ite Muslims.

    “The country is not a simple case of Sunnis and Shia Muslims competing for dominance of the political and economic resources of the state,” it says.

    "Sunnis and Shia are joined by many other identities, not least of Bahrainis.

    “Despite the manipulation of demographics to attempt to delegitimise Bahrain’s immigration policy, and the government by extension, Bahrain continues to be a vibrant society where the majority of all citizens and residents from the full spectrum of ethnic, religious, linguistic, social and political groups enjoy freedom of speech, of assembly, of worship, of association.”

    2) Bahrain Re-Opens to (Pseudo-) Academics

    the purpose of the Belfer paper is clear: to counter perceptions—local but probably mainly Western perceptions—of employment discrimination against Shi’a citizens. Of course, insofar as the main grievance of Shi’a is not simply employment discrimination per se but disproportionate exclusion from politically-important positions—indeed, from precisely those ministries (and security services) not included in Belfer’s report—it does not directly address this issue.

    Yet the bigger problem with the paper would seem to be one for the government itself. That is, what exactly is the lesson here? And to whom is it directed? Though the article’s main audience is obviously Western, still if I were the Bahraini government I don’t know if I would want to be advertising the fact that, in reality, Shi’a citizens seem to be doing better than Sunnis in many industries and agencies. For, as my own survey results showed, the political views and behavior of ordinary Shi’a Bahrainis are not systematically related to their economic status; those of Sunnis, by contrast, are, and one would think the state would be cognizant of this.

    Thanks may be in order, therefore, to Mitchell A. Belfer, who seems to have substantiated the primary complaint of many of the government’s fiercest critics: that Bahraini Sunnis are poorly rewarded for their staunch support of the government, which continues to patronize exactly those who oppose it.

    http://bahrainipolitics.blogspot.fr/2013/05/bahrain-re-opens-to-pseudo-academics.html

  • The Bahraini government has postponed indefinitely a visit by Juan Mendez the UN special rapporteur on torture. According to the country’s official news agency the trip has been called off “until further notice”. This comes just days after the release of a US State Department report on human rights in Bahrain which spoke of “significant” violations including torture in detention.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-22265484

  • Démission du président du Royal Collage of Surgeons in Ireland, Bahreïn campus à propos d’une conférence co-organisée avec MSF, finalement annulée .

    The Bahraini government’s official spokeswoman [Samira Rajab] has accused Prof Tom Collins, the president of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RSCI) Bahrain campus, of “utter lies” after Prof Collins said he was resigning because a conference he helped organise on medical ethics failed to get a permit.

    Prof Collins informed staff and students at the weekend that he was stepping down in protest over the cancellation of the two-day event which was to examine “medical ethics and dilemmas in situations of political discord or violence” and was co-sponsored by medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières.

    http://www.irishtimes.com/news/health/college-of-surgeons-bahrain-head-quits-over-conference-permit-1.1338575

    “The view locally was that the timing was not right for the planned conference and therefore it has been deferred,” Prof Collins said.

    http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=350115

    • D’après le pro-régime Gulf Daily News, une délégation du Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland vient présenter ses esxcuses au Royaume...

      high-profile delegation from the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland will arrive in Bahrain next week to apologise to officials for the practices of Professor Tom Collins, president of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland-Medical University of Bahrain (RCSI-MUB), reports our sister paper Akhbar Al Khaleej.

      Prof Collins left Bahrain last night after being warned by the RCSI to leave the kingdom immediately.

      Earlier, he was officially informed that his contract would be terminated in June.

      He was told that his tenure would not be extended and that he had to return to Dublin before the expiry of his contract, sources said.

      Prof Collins’ replacement will be a renowned person who is sympathetic towards Bahrain and has contributed to establishing the university in the kingdom, the sources added.

      The RCSI’s action in the matter is out of its keenness to maintain good relations with Bahrain, the sources said.

      http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=350334

  • Confrontation entre le Bahrain Centre for Human Rights et le régime

    Security forces in Bahrain have fired tear gas to prevent protesters from reaching the house of a jailed human rights activist who is the focus of an international campaign seeking his release.
    Riot police clashed with hundreds of marchers trying to gather at the home of Nabeel Rajab, who has been sentenced to two years in prison on charges of backing “illegal” protests.
    Authorities also set up roadblocks to keep cars from reaching the house

    http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/M/ML_BAHRAIN?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

    • Allégations et dénégations:

      Zainab and her father, AbdulHadi al Khawaja,on hunger strike in Bahrain are also refusing fluids in protest at being denied visits from their family, the BCHR said on Monday.

      But the Bahraini government said Zainab al-Khawaja was accepting fluids and denied that her father was on any form of hunger strike.

      “Both Abdulhadi al-Khawaja and his daughter Zainab al-Khawaja were denied family visits for the second time this weekend, prompting them to start a dry hunger strike today, 24 March,” the centre said in the statement.

      The Bahraini government said only Zainab was on hunger strike, which she began on March 18. “But she is taking all kinds of fluid,” Sameera Rajab, Bahrain’s information minister, told Reuters by telephone from Manama.

      Reuters

  • Remarks of President Barack Obama—As Prepared for Delivery—"A Moment of Opportunity" | The White House
    http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/05/19/remarks-president-middle-east-and-north-africa

    Bahrain is a long-standing partner, and we are committed to its security. We recognize that Iran has tried to take advantage of the turmoil there, and that the Bahraini government has a legitimate interest in the rule of law.

    #orwell

  • Saudi Arabia’s Action in Bahrain Strains Ties With United States - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/15/world/middleeast/15saudi.html?ref=middleeast&pagewanted=all

    At a press briefing on Monday, the White House spokesman, Jay Carney, carefully avoided direct criticism of the Saudi-led entry of gulf forces into Bahrain, telling reporters that, in the view of the White House, “this is not an invasion of the a country.” But he added: “We’re calling on the Saudis, the other members of the G.C.C. countries, as well as the Bahraini government, to show restraint. And we believe that political dialogue is the way to address the unrest that has occurred in the region in Bahrain and in other countries, and not to, in any way, suppress it.”

    Principe orwellien : si ça n’est pas une invasion, pourquoi devoir préciser qu’il ne s’agit pas d’une invasion ? Parce qu’on aurait pu le croire ? #Bahreïn