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Showing posts with label US Navy 5th Fleet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US Navy 5th Fleet. Show all posts

21 April 2012

Bahrain Live Blog from AL JAZEERA 21APR12


 I am ashamed of my government's, the American government's continuing support of the brutal and bloody dictatorship in Bahrain and their hypocrisy on the killings, beatings, torture, repression and imprisonment of political prisoners and prisoners of conscience in Bahrain (to keep port access for the US Navy 5th Fleet) while they condemn (rightfully so) the same in Syria. It is a sad comment on the immorality of our foreign policy.
http://blogs.aljazeera.net/liveblog/Bahrain 
One year after the pro-democracy uprising began on February 14, protests against the ruling al-Khalifa monarchy continue across Bahrain.
Al Jazeera is not responsible for content derived from external sites.
Bahrain's Ministry of Interior released a statement on Saturday evening that it would launch an investigation into the death of Salah Abbas Habib who activists say was killed by police. Here is the statement in full:
The Chief of Public Security Major-General Tariq Al Hasan announced that the operations room received a call at 8:10am on Saturday regarding the body of a deceased person in a garden in Shakhura. The police and crime scene investigators immediately went to the scene and launched an investigation.

The death was determined to have happened under suspicious circumstances. The public prosecutor was immediately notified and the medical examiner was sent to the scene.

The name of the deceased is Salah Abbas Habib Musa, 36. The Chief said more details would be released as they become known. He reminded everyone, both journalists and the public, to wait for the facts to be established and not to believe unconfirmed reports on social media channels.
Video uploaded to Youtube reportedly shows "February 14" opposition activists blocking off a highway in Bahrain on Saturday.

Reports emerged on Saturday that Mohammed Hasan, a Bahraini fixer who has worked with various news agencies including Al Jazeera, was injured and arrested during pro-democracy protests on Friday night. This news has since been confirmed by his family. Below is video showing Moahmed Hasan when he appeared on US journalist Dan Rather's program. Below the video are tweets from Dan Rather with an update on Hasan from Bahraini activist Ala'a Shehabi.


DanRatherReport

alaashehabi
This tweet earlier is from Dr. Fatima Haji, one of the medics sentenced to prison last year:

drFatimaHj
A new video by Witness Bahrain illustrates a story told by Zainab al-Akhawaja after a recent phone conversation with her father and jailed hunger striker, Abdulhadi al-Khawaja.
This video uploaded to Youtube reportedly shows a person filming police as they prepare to remove the body of Salah Abbas Habib from a rooftop in the village of Shakoura, Bahrain. The police can be heard shouting at the man asking him what he's doing, when he replies that he's filming a number of shots can be heard before the camera stops recording. The last part of the video appears to show blood on the rooftop after Habib's body was removed.
In a statement on social networking website Twitter, the interior ministry confirmed the death and said authorities have begun investigation into the incident.
The main opposition bloc, al-Wefaq, said on Saturday that a Bahraini man was found dead after clashes with riot police in the village of Shakhoura, a day before Formula One Grand Prix race.
Wefaq named the dead demonstrator as Salah Abbas Habib, 37, and said his body was found on the roof of a building. It said Habib was part of a group who were beaten by police during clashes late on Friday night.
Witnesses told AFP news agency that security forces fired tear gas and sound bombs to disperse dozens of people who gathered at the area where Habib's body was found.
Matar Matar, former MP representing the al-Wefaq bloc in Bahrain has tweeted about death of a man.

AmberLyon
Our correspondent in Manama says it was relatively quiet on Friday night, after police dispersed a protest.
"There was some unrest in a few Shia villages and a few arrests made. This morning some villages have been closing access roads to them by setting fires."
Widespread protests are expected in Shia villages this evening, as well as a rally in the capital.
Tags protests
Physicians for Human Rights is calling attention to "ongoing abuses" in Bahrain, in regards to fears that use of tear gas by security forces could cause long term health problems.
In their press release, PHR's Deputy Director Richard Sollom said:
"Despite promises of reform since our investigation to the Kingdom last year, the Government’s excessive use of force has only increased. Security forces now strategically use tear gas – its innocuous-sounding name belies its deadliness – as a potentially lethal weapon against men, women, children, and the elderly alike. More troubling is the Government’s pattern of attack. Not only do security forces target street protesters, they go out of their way to shoot or throw tear gas into civilian homes. We may be beginning to see serious longer-term health consequences among people routinely exposed to high doses of this toxic gas. Based on our findings, PHR is concerned about possible increased rates of miscarriage and birth defects in Bahrain."
Cancelling Sunday's Bahrain Formula One Grand Prix would only "empower extremists", the country's Crown Prince told reporters on Friday as police in the small Gulf state battled to put down pro-democracy protests.
Prince Salman did not respond directly to questions about whether he could guarantee the safety of teams, however, saying instead that he was able to guarantee that the protests were not directed against Formula One.
Standing alongside Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone at the Sakhir circuit, the Crown Prince made it clear to the assembled TV crews that calls from home and abroad for the race to be scrapped would fall on deaf ears.
"I think cancelling the race just empowers extremists," he declared, without specifying exactly who he had in mind.
"For those of us trying to navigate a way out of this political problem, having the race allows us to build bridges across communities, to get people working together. It allows us to celebrate our nation. It is an idea that is positive, not one that is divisive."   [Reuters]
Al Jazeera's special correspondent, who cannot be named for security reasons, reported from Manama, Bahrain, on Friday afternoon, after being tear gassed while following a group of protesters. This is what he said:
"I'm now inside a shopping mall where a good deal of the protesters are now taking cover from the tear gas and riot police who are outside now.
"I would say about 3000 people gathered with banners and chanting for freedom and democracy and dignity.
"That demonstration has now been effectively disrupted by the police.
"I think there's too much money involved in this and I think we're too far down the road for them to cancel [the Formula 1 race which activists are protesting against]."
Our correspondent also sent in these images of the protest from Friday, before security forces deployed tear gas.
http://youtu.be/6r14NNMIWJ0 
Tags Manama
The Force India Formula One team will limit their involvement in second practice for the Bahrain Grand Prix and may skip the session altogether for safety reasons, Bob Fernley, the deputy team principal, told reporters. 

He said the team, some of whose members were caught in a petrol bomb incident after leaving the track on Wednesday, would take part in Saturday's qualifying and Sunday's race as scheduled however.

Al Jazeera's correspondent in the capital Manama, who we are not naming due to reporting restrictions imposed by Bahrain's government, said the team "do not want to be travelling after dark".

The announcement also comes amid reports that anti-government protests will start at 4pm local time, about 30 minutes after practice ends.

Swiss-based Sauber revealed their Bahrain Grand Prix mechanics had also witnessed the fiery incident.

Sauber said in a statement that the mechanics had seen flames in the road after they left the Sakhir circuit in a minibus on Thursday night to return to their hotel in Manama.
"At 20:50 hrs the 12 mechanics being on that bus noticed fire on the medial strip of the highway. The traffic was slow, cars had their hazard flashers on," the Formula One team said.

"On the opposite lane there was no traffic. The team members saw a few masked people running from there over to their lane where a bottle was burning as well. The minibus moved to the very right side of the highway and went past the situation."
While international sports correspondents are in Bahrain for the race, non-sports reporters from various other news organisations have not been granted visas to visit the Gulf island.
Click here to read our latest news story on Bahrain.

For more of Al Jazeera's special coverage visit our spotlight page - Bahrain Protests
[Force India's German driver Nico Hulkenberg arrives in the pits on Friday, during first practice session at the Bahrain International Circuit in Manama ahead of the Bahrain Formula One Grand Prix - Photo: AFP]
File 64216

Bahraini security forces have clashed with protesters against Bahrain's controversial Grand Prix in mainly Shia villages despite increasing security for the start of practice sessions.
The overnight clashes between protesters and security forces across Shia villages continued into the early morning on Friday, witnesses said.

Formula One cars took to the track in Bahrain at about 07:00 GMT, with the government hoping for a successful Grand Prix, while activists are promising to mark it with "days of rage" after more than a year of Arab Spring protests.

"The people want to topple the regime," chanted dozens of protesters carrying pictures of jailed hunger striker Abdulhadi al-Khawaja. "Down Hamad," they called, referring to Bahrain's king, Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa.
Met by tear gas and sound bombs, the protesters responded by hurling petrol bombs at security forces, witnesses said.

Mohammed Al-Maskati, president of Bahrain Youth Society for Human Rights, told Al Jazeera the mood in Manama in the run-up to Sunday's race was one of "anger".

He said the protesters "are very angry that [the] Formula One [race] was not cancelled - they want to send a message to say that sports must not support dictatorships and human rights violations".
Al Jazeera's correspondent in the capital Manama, who we are not naming due to reporting restrictions imposed by Bahrain's government, said a protest by anti-government demonstrators "will be held later today on the main highway in capital, where they will come out in force to show the world that Formula One really is not welcome here".
He said many were plagued with "security concerns".
"Most tourists and Formula One spectators are choosing to stay away from this race because it is just too controversial for them, I think people feel their security and personal wellbeing, cannot be guaranteed enough to make the trip worthwhile."
Continue reading our news story Clashes in Bahrain ahead of F1 race for more context.

For more of Al Jazeera's special coverage visit our spotlight page - Bahrain Protests.
[Clashes have been building in week leading to Sunday's round of World Championship - Photo: Reuters] 
While international sports correspondents are in Bahrain for the race, non-sports reporters from the Reuters news agency and some other news organisations have not been granted visas to visit the Gulf island.

According to reports, journalists from the Associated Press news agency, the AFP news agency, and Sky News have also been prevented from entering the country.
An AFP photographer, accredited by the sport's governing body, the FIA (Federation Internationale de l'Automobile), was informed by Bahrain's information affairs authority that there has been a "delay to your visa application, so it might not be processed".
Associated Press said two of its Dubai-based journalists were prevented from covering the Grant Prix because they could not receive entry visas, despite being accredited by the FIA.
Meanwhile, according to the AFP, cameramen already in Bahrain were required to keep fluorescent orange stickers on their cameras so that they would be easily recognisable to ensure they do not cover any off-track events, such as ongoing protests.
Simeon Kerr, from the Financial Times, tweeted last night that he was denied access to Bahrain to cover the Formula One:

simeonkerr
File 64216

Formula One cars take to the track in Bahrain today with the government hoping a successful Grand Prix will draw a line under more than a year of Arab Spring protests and activists promising to mark the motor race with "days of rage". 

On the eve of the first practice session, police fired tear gas and stun grenades to disperse demonstrators on Thursday in the kind of clashes that have built up in the week leading to Sunday's round of the World Championship.

Bahrain has been in turmoil since a democracy movement erupted last year following uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia.

Protests were initially crushed with the loss of dozens of lives, but youths still clash daily with riot police in Shia Muslim districts and thousands take part in opposition rallies. 

Two members of the British-based Force India team asked to go home after seeing burning of petrol bombs in what the
government described as an isolated incident.

"A number of rioters and vandals had been arrested for taking part in illegal rallies and gatherings, blocking roads and endangering people's lives by attacking them with petrol bombs, iron rods and stones," the Information Affairs Authority said in a statement, citing Major General Tariq al-Hassan.
However, activists accused the kingdom's rulers of using the motor race to improve their international image. 
"Formula One in Bahrain has been taken as PR for the ruling elite, the repressive dictators who are ruling the country," activist Nabeel Rajab told a news conference.
Bahrain's ruling al-Khalifa family hopes the race will offer an opportunity to tell the world that life is returning to normal. 

Large sums of money are stake this weekend. Last year, Bahrain paid a "hosting fee" of $40m despite cancelling the race. The Grand Prix drew 100,000 visitors to the nation of just 1.3 million and generated half a billion dollars in spending when it was last held two years ago. 

[Source: Reuters]

Click here to read our latest news story on Bahrain.

For more of Al Jazeera's special coverage visit our spotlight page - Bahrain Protests.Anti-Formula One graffiti in the Bahraini village of Barbar, west of Manama, which reads, "Boycott F1 in Bahrain, you will race on the blood of martyrs": 
BBC reports that Force India were forced to flee after petrol bombs were hurled over their vehicle.
Activists are calling on Formula One team Sauber to carry a pro-democracy sticker saying ``No Guns Against Voices'' on its cars at the Bahrain Grand Prix on Sunday.

The GSoA group, which campaigns for Switzerland to abolish its army, was presenting the Swiss team with the 5-foot decals bearing the slogan at the team's headquarters on Thursday.

Campaign spokesman Jonas Zuercher told The Associated Press the message could be displayed on the rear wing of cars driven by Sergio Perez and Kamui Kobayashi.

Zuercher claims Bahrain is playing "image politics" by staging the race while the Gulf kingdom is suppressing pro democracy protests.

Zuercher says Sauber could "make a sign" to the people of Bahrain.

A group of British MPs have launched a campaign calling for this weekend's Formula One motor race in Bahrain to be called off, while thousands of activists continue to protest in the country.
However, the Chairman of the track where the race will be held says the protests are not as important as international media are making them out to be.
Al Jazeera speaks to Fahad al Binali from the Bahrain Information Affairs Authority; Zayed el Zayani, chairman of the Bahrain international circuit; and Nabeel Rajab, head of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights.

05 January 2012

Bahrain: The Revolution That Wasn't 5JAN12

A LOT of us have been inspired by the Arab Spring of 2011. The bravery, the sacrifice of the people of Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, Libya, Syria and Bahrain, some revolutions won, some still works in progress, and at least one brutally crushed, Bahrain's. All fueled by people's desire to be free, to have their human rights respected and protected, to be able to live without the threat of their own government being able to arrest, detain, torture and even kill them because of their ethnicity, religion, gender, occupation and politics. Now the American government expresses concern about possible Islamist governments coming to power in the Maghreb and what that means for American foreign policy and the human rights of the citizens of these nations. We need to get over ourselves, take the log out of our own eye before judging these nations. American approval of the brutal repression of the Bahraini revolution by the military forces of Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and the U.A.E. and our approval of the detention, torture, sham trials and even the deaths of members of the political opposition in Bahrain only strengthens the political fortunes of those who are justifiably wary of American approval and support. They have seen first hand that freedom and human rights are OK only if it benefits corporate America and our military-industrial complex. We allowed our corporate interest in Persian Gulf oil (of which very little is exported to the U.S.) and the profit margins of the U.S. military industrial complex (the U.S. Navy 5th fleet in Bahrain, military hardware sales to all in the region except Iran) determine that freedom and democracy and human rights are not necessary in Bahrain. This from NPR....
Bahrain is the one Arab country where the government has suppressed a major uprising. Here, protesters wave flags at the Pearl Roundabout in the capital Manama on Feb. 20, 2011, when the demonstrations were at their peak.
Enlarge John Moore/Getty Images Bahrain is the one Arab country where the government has suppressed a major uprising. Here, protesters wave flags at the Pearl Roundabout in the capital Manama on Feb. 20, 2011, when the demonstrations were at their peak.
Arab revolts against secular leaders have been much more successful over the past year than those against monarchs. The one monarchy that faced a serious threat was the tiny Persian Gulf island of Bahrain. But after weeks of protests, troops from Saudi Arabia rolled into the country, the Bahraini regime imposed martial law, and a government crackdown followed. Kelly McEvers made several trips to Bahrain this past year and filed this report as part of NPR's series looking at the Arab Spring and where it stands today.
Bahrain's uprising didn't get quite as much attention as some of the others in the Arab world last year. But it was one of the first, beginning on Feb. 14.
One man, who has been in and out of jail since then and could only talk to me while hunkered down in his car, was there.
"I remember the 14 February night — I cannot forget this night. Really I cannot forget," says the man, who asked not to be named. "Even my wife, she was telling me you'll be crazy. At the end, you will be crazy. Nothing will happen. A few people will protest and they will crush them and that's all."
No, he told his wife. This time it's different.
Bahrainis had protested before, mainly about the fact that the country's majority Shiites remain poor and disenfranchised by the Sunni monarchy. But they'd never protested like this.
At first the protesters asked for things like an elected Parliament, a new constitution. But then when demonstrators started getting killed, tens of thousands of Bahrainis converged on a place called the Pearl Roundabout to call for the fall of the ruling Al Khalifa family.
Bahrain State TV called protesters traitors and agents of Iran, which is nearby and also has a Shiite majority.
In Bahrain, pro-government thugs attacked protesters, and protesters fought back. Just one month into the uprising, Bahrain's ruling family authorized some 1,500 troops from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to enter the country.
Apache helicopters circled overhead as authorities cleared the Pearl Roundabout of all protesters. They never made it back.
An independent commission found that the Bahrain security forces used excessive force and tortured some of those detained. Here, family members look upon the body of protester Abdul Ridha Mohammed, who was shot in the head and died of his wounds on Feb. 21, 2011.
Enlarge John Moore/Getty Images An independent commission found that the Bahrain security forces used excessive force and tortured some of those detained. Here, family members look upon the body of protester Abdul Ridha Mohammed, who was shot in the head and died of his wounds on Feb. 21, 2011.
An Uprising Supressed
And so Bahrain became the one Arab country whose uprising was definitively put down. One reason, argues Toby Jones, a professor of Middle East history at Rutgers University, is that the United States and its allies wanted it that way.
For all America's talk during the Arab Spring about supporting those who seek freedom, Jones says, Bahrain was different.
"If there is a place globally where there is not just distance but a huge gap between American interests and American values, it's in the Persian Gulf," Jones says. "And its epicenter is in Bahrain. Bahrain is ground zero for the Arab Spring in the Persian Gulf. And the United States has chosen sides. It has decided that it wants to see the Bahraini regime survive and endure. And that's important not only for the American relationship with Bahrain but for Saudi Arabia."
The U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet is based in Bahrain, giving the U.S. a major presence that has only increased in significance following the U.S. withdrawal of forces from Iraq.
In addition, Saudi Arabia didn't want protests in its own backyard, Jones says. And it didn't want a Shiite-led uprising to encourage its archrival, Shiite-dominated Iran.
Bahrain's uprising was suppressed in a harsh crackdown. Thousands of people were rounded up, detained, and sometimes tortured. Two of those detained were elected members of Parliament. Others were doctors who treated protesters, journalists who wrote about them, and lawyers who defended them. Several people died while in custody.
Bahrain largely silenced the uprising, but not entirely. Sporadic protests continued and human-rights groups condemned the government actions.
After The Revolt, An Investigation
Eventually, King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa commissioned a group of international jurists to investigate. The commission recently issued its findings at one of the king's palaces.

More In This Series

Part 1: Turning Elections Into Democracy
Part 2: Islamists On The Rise
Part 3: Syria — A Looming Civil War?
Today: Bahrain — An Uprising Suppressed
Part 5: Turkey's Expanding Role
Part 6: The U.S. And The Arab Spring
Nigel Rodley, a human-rights lawyer who served on the commission, says the group didn't have enough time to discover who ordered the crackdown. But it was clear the army, police and intelligence services were all using the same sinister tactics.
"They were all using the same methods of apprehension, detention, ill treatment, and so on, which suggested a policy across different branches of government," he said.
For a moment, activists in Bahrain thought these findings might help revive their revolution. But while committees and commissions have been formed to implement some of the report's recommendations, no single high-ranking official has been held accountable for the deaths and the torture.
Back during the protests, Sadiq Abdullah, a doctor, was interviewed by Al-Jazeera about protesters who had been shot by security forces.
He eventually was called in for questioning by the intelligence service. Three months later and 40 pounds lighter, the doctor was released, but he still faces charges.
He and his wife, Nidhal, recently took me to their private clinic, in a building that houses a dozen or so other clinics.
"Everyone in this building was in jail," Nidhal said.
Sadiq used to be the only doctor in Bahrain who could do kidney transplants. Now he has been fired from his position at the government hospital. One of his students does the transplants.
"They've done two cases in the last eight months," Sadiq said.
And there are 98 people on the waiting list. Sadiq is furious at a government that would deprive its people of such care. Still, he has a lot to lose here in Bahrain. At the clinic he can earn in one day what he made in a month at the government hospital.
The United States has chosen sides. It has decided that it wants to see the Bahraini regime survive and endure. And that's important not only for the American relationship with Bahrain but for Saudi Arabia.
In fact, Sadiq and Nidhal are talking about expanding.
"We have to think of other options," Sadiq said, noting that it could include performing private kidney transplants
This is another way Bahrain differs from the other Arab uprisings. In Bahrain, the wall of fear hasn't been broken. People realize they have a lot to lose.
Now the only form of public gatherings allowed in Bahrain is a funeral — like a recent procession for a man who witnesses say was killed when riot police smashed into his car.
As the man was buried, people started chanting slogans against the regime. The riot police approached. A few young protesters threw rocks. The police responded with rubber bullets, sound grenades and tear gas.
That's all that was left of Bahrain's uprising.
The monument at the Pearl Roundabout has been demolished. All roads to it are blocked by armored vehicles. Protests are stopped before they make it out of the villages.
This is what's happening in villages all over Bahrain. But each one is contained and individual.
There's no large movement as was the case back in February and March. And from what a lot of people say, there's not going to be one anytime soon.
The riot police eventually fell back, protesters went back into their houses, and the village started to put itself back together.
For now, the uprising appears to be over. As the sun goes down, it's time for evening prayer. There is garbage on the streets, but somebody will come and clean it up. And then, life will get back to normal. Just like nothing ever happened.
   
After a crackdown, the government has promised reforms. But so far, little has changed.

The Arab Spring: One Year Later

Bahrain: The Revolution That Wasn't

After a crackdown, the government has promised reforms. But so far, little has changed.
Upheavals in Syria and elsewhere in the Middle East have left minorities feeling vulnerable.

The Arab Spring: One Year Later

Syrian Uprising Raises The Specter Of Sectarian War

Upheavals in Syria and elsewhere in the Middle East have left minorities feeling vulnerable.
Moammar Gadhafi long suppressed Islamists; with his death, Islamists are now starting to organize.

The Arab Spring: One Year Later

In Post-Gadhafi Libya, Islamists Start To Rise

Moammar Gadhafi long suppressed Islamists; with his death, Islamists are now starting to organize

26 October 2011

Help Free Tortured Bahraini Teacher Jaleela Al-Salman from Human Rights First 25OKT11

THE American government claims to support the non-violent protesters calling for freedom, democracy and human rights in the Arab world. The American government participated in NATO actions supporting the Libyan revolution, supported the peaceful protesters in Tunisia and Egypt and has been very supportive of the pro democracy protesters in Syria. BUT the American government has turned it's back on the peaceful pro democracy protesters in Bahrain and turned a blind eye on the brutal reaction of the Bahraini government while they killed hundreds of their own citizens and have arrested, tortured and imprisoned thousands of Bahrainis. Why? The American Fifth Fleet is based in Bahrain and the U.S. military-industrial complex makes a lot of money selling weapons to the Bahraini government. The American government should be considering whether the Navy will be allowed to stay in Bahrain once the pro democracy movement actually wins control of the nation. Please sign the petition by Human Rights First calling for the release of Jaleela Al-Salman, a Bahraini teacher active in the movement for freedom, democracy and human rights. She has been arrested again and is facing more torture by the government as long as she is in their custody. Watch her video and click the link to sign....




Join Us On Facebook Follow Us On Twitter Donate to Support Human Rights First's Work

Free Jaleela - Tortured Bahraini Teacher Detained Again
The Bahraini government isn't just targeting  medics; it's going after teachers too.
Two weeks ago, Jaleela Al-Salman, a Bahraini teacher and vice president of the Bahrain Teachers Association, told me that the Bahraini security forces had tortured her when she was in detention earlier this year. Just after we spoke, masked men in civilian clothes broke into her home and abducted her again. There is a very real danger she will be tortured again.
Stand with Bahraini activists! Ask the Ambassador of the Kingdom of Bahrain to the United States, Houda Ezra Ebrahim Nonoo, to help free Jaleela immediately and to push for the Bahrain security forces to respect peaceful protests.
The Bahraini security forces first took Jaleela into custody in March for supporting the democracy movement. She was detained for over five months—longer than of any other woman arrested in connection to the pro-democracy protests. After a sham trial, a military court sentenced her to three years in prison relying on a confession Jaleela signed after being tortured. She was released pending an appeal scheduled for December. While she was free, Jaleela spoke out about her abuse by the government, and this could be the reason for her re-arrest.
Bahrain's pro-democracy protests have been the largest, proportionately, of any country in the Middle East. Hundreds of thousands of citizens have risen up to demand their human rights. The Bahrain monarchy has responded with a violent crackdown.
At Human Rights First, we work to make sure that the United States lives up to its ideals on human rights. Bahrain, the home of the U.S. Navy's Fifth Fleet, is an important ally of the United States that must not be allowed to violate the rights of its people.
We cannot stand by while activists continue to be detained and violently silenced for supporting democracy. Sign the petition now!
Human Rights First will deliver this petition to the Ambassador of the Kingdom of Bahrain to the United States, Houda Ezra Ebrahim Nonoo, and urge her to support release for Jaleela and other Bahraini activists fighting for democracy and human rights. Sign now!
Sincerely,
Brian Dooley
Human Rights First

Human Rights First,
333 Seventh Avenue, 13th Floor, New York, NY 10001-5004
www.humanrightsfirst.org
Join us on Facebook, Follow us on Twitter

13 October 2011

Tell Congress: Stop Rewarding Dictators with Weapons! 12OKT11

MUCH to our shame the American government has resumed military arms sales to the brutal, repressive, undemocratic government of Bahrain. This action by the American government makes a mockery of our claim to support pro-democratic, freedom loving people around the world, exposes the hypocrisy of our foreign policy carried out in our name but in reality to enrich and feed the greed of the American military-industrial complex. How can the American government condemn Syria for their bloody repression of their own people's struggle for freedom and democracy and then reward Bahrain for doing the same? Doctors and nurses in Bahrain have been arrested, tortured, faced "trials" and have been sentenced to prison for treating wounded pro-democracy protesters. Bahraini athletes, political activist, human right activist and regular citizens have experienced the same and scores have been killed by Bahraini government forces backed by troops from Saudi Arabia. Please support the joint Resolution of Disapproval, introduced by Sen Ron Wyden D OR and Rep Jim McGovern D MA to block the sale of military hardware and weapons to Bahrain while the government of Bahrain continues to kill, torture and imprison their own citizens who are peacefully struggling for freedom, democracy and human rights.

Stop the Department of Defense from selling arms to Bahrains dictator
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Human Rights First is voicing concerns of frontline activists in Bahrain and making sure that the U.S. use its leverage to promote human rights and democracy in the region. Resources:



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Tell Congress: Stop arms sale to Bahrain
Good news! Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Congressman James McGovern (D-MA) have stepped up and are leading the fight in Congress to stop the arms sale to Bahrain's brutal monarchy. They introduced a joint Resolution of Disapproval in Congress that will block this sale immediately. But now your Senators and Representatives need to hear from you.
Tell Congress to stop arming the Bahraini dictatorship with weapons by supporting this resolution today!
Bahrain's pro-democracy protests have been the largest, proportionately, of any country in the Middle East. Hundreds of thousands of citizens have risen up to demand their human rights. The Bahraini regime, trying to protect its power, has abducted, tortured, and killed peaceful protestors.
Home of the Navy's U.S. Fifth Fleet, Bahrain is an important strategic U.S. ally, and the United States has been muted in its criticisms of the regime's brutality. Now the Pentagon intends to sell $53 million worth of armored Humvees and TOW missiles to Bahrain. The United States should not reward a regime that brutalizes its people.
Tell Congress to stand on the side of democracy and human rights in the Middle East by blocking the arms sale to the Bahrain Monarchy!
If the United States aspires to be a global leader on human rights and inspire those fighting for democracy in the Middle East and elsewhere, it simply cannot reward repressive regimes with weapons. It must side with human rights, not dictators.
Sincerely,
Brian Dooley
Human Rights First

15 July 2011

President Obama: Push for a Real National Dialogue in Bahrain! 15JUL11

THE American government has a moral responsibility to support the nonviolent protesters in Bahrain in their struggle for freedom, democracy and human rights. The violence by the Bahrani government against their citizens, the killing, mass arrest, torture, sham trials and imprisonment in inhumane conditions must end, as must the U.S. government support through our military presence in Bahrain. Failure to recognize and address the legitimate issues of the peaceful opposition should result in a withdrawing of the US Navy's 5th fleet operations from Bahrain. We are hypocritical in our foreign policy by condemning and taking action against Libya and Syria for brutally repressing revolutions while implicitly supporting the government of Bahrain through our military presence. Please sign this petition from Human Rights First to Pres Obama calling on the US govt to pressure the govt of Bahrain to end their violent crackdown on the nonviolent opposition.


Bahrain Protestors
Despite an ongoing national dialogue between the Bahraini government and some parts of civil society, the government continues to intimidate, torture, and detain human rights defenders, and shoot at civilians.
The United States has taken many positive steps in addressing human rights violations committed by the Bahraini government, which hosts the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet, but more needs to be done as the crackdown on pro-democracy activists and their supporters continues.
Ask President Obama to take a tougher stance with the Bahraini government and publicly push for a national dialogue that can lead toward reconciliation.
Human Rights First went to Bahrain and spoke with a number of human rights defenders, torture survivors and recently released detainees. In a report released yesterday, we found that the situation on the ground remains dire and dangerous for human rights defenders and civilians. For a real national dialogue to occur, President Obama should insist upon the following benchmarks:
  • End the continuing crackdown on pro-democracy activists and supporters and shootings at unarmed civilians, as witnessed by Human Rights First staff;
  • End arbitrary detentions, torture and mistreatment of detainees;
  • End sectarian violence and discrimination against the Shi’a community;
  • Release of peaceful protestors from jail and drop all charges pending against them; and
  • An end to the expulsion of students.
Ask President Obama to support real reconciliation in Bahrain by pushing for an end to the continuing crackdown and for a dialogue that addresses concerns by the Bahraini people.
The continuing crackdown, growing sectarian divide and the puppet show of a national dialogue are preventing real reconciliation from occurring in Bahrain. People continue to live in fear of violence, detention and torture.
Thank you for taking action!
Sincerely,

Quinn O'Keefe
Senior Associate, Human Rights Defenders


11 June 2011

BAHRAIN: Blood on the streets, injustice in the courts from AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL 7JUN11

THE U.S. government and military MUST demand the government of Bahrain release all political prisoners, prisoners of conscience, and end the show trials for those arrested for protesting for and supporting the nonviolent demonstrations for freedom, democracy and the end of corruption in the Bahraini government. We have been on the wrong side of people struggling for their human rights too many times, we can not continue doing so and must demand the government of Bahrain free these people and recognize their Universal Human Rights. Click the link to participate in this action from AI, Amnesty International....
Amnesty International
Bahraini officials couldn't silence activists on the streets, so they'll try to do it in the courtroom.
Hi Supporter,

Emergency rule was lifted in Bahrain last week.

While the harsh laws responsible for the widespread government crackdowns against civilians are no longer being enforced, the injustice remains.

The long (and growing) list of people being paraded in front of military courts is simply appalling!

This week, nearly 50 of the brave doctors and nurses who treated protestors during the months of bitter and bloody street violence are being called into court.1

Furthermore, a total of 21 opposition figures, including seven in absentia, who led and participated in the demonstrations, are being tried in military court without proper access to lawyers, their families, or foreign media coverage. Several of these individuals are likely prisoners of conscience.

The people of Bahrain were too powerful to be finished off in the streets. Stop Bahraini officials from trying to silence them behind the closed doors of military courts!

In May, President Obama had called on Bahraini authorities to respect their citizens' human rights. Since then, the U.S. has done little to follow through with diplomatic pressure.

President Obama said that "the only way forward is for the government and opposition to engage in a dialogue, and you can't have a real dialogue when parts of the peaceful opposition are in jail."

We couldn't agree with you more, Mr. President. That's why we're encouraging the U.S. to turn up the volume on its calls to Bahraini authorities. Demand that all opposition figures currently on trial be: 1) granted regular access to their lawyers and families and 2) released immediately and unconditionally, if held solely for criticizing the authorities.

Far too many civilians have already lost their lives on the streets of Bahrain. Taking action now could mean protecting others from losing their freedom in court.

In Solidarity,

Christoph Koettl
Crisis Campaigner, Middle East and North Africa
Amnesty International USA

28 April 2011

Bahrain Execution Scheduled For Shiite Protesters 28APR11

IF this was happening in Cuba or N Korea or Iran the U.S. government would be howling in protest. Some in the administration might even have the courage to speak up if it was happening in the prc....but it is happening in BAHRAIN, base of the U.S. NAVY 5TH FLEET, and by our silence and by keeping the 5th Fleet in Bahrain we will give Islamic extremist one more piece of propaganda to use against us. We have a moral duty to object to these sentences and to insist the Bahraini government meet the demands of it's people for freedom, democracy and human rights.
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — A military court in Bahrain sentenced four Shiite protesters to death after convicting them on Thursday of killing two policemen during anti-government demonstrations last month, state media said.
Three other Shiite activists, who were also on trial, were sentenced to life in prison after they were convicted of playing a role in the policemen's deaths.
The verdicts – which can be appealed – were the first related to Bahrain's uprising. The kingdom's Shiite majority has long complained of discrimination and is campaigning for greater freedoms and equal rights in the tiny, Sunni-ruled island nation, which is home to the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet.
Bahraini human rights groups blasted the verdict and said the trial, conducted in secrecy, had no legal credibility and was politically motivated.
"This verdict is a message from the government, determined to stop the democracy movement," said Nabeel Rajab, head of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights. "It's a warning saying 'this is how we will treat you if you continue to demand your rights.'"
Faced with unprecedented political unrest, Bahrain's king declared martial law and invited troops from Saudi Arabia and other Sunni-ruled Gulf countries to help quell Shiite dissent after weeks of street marches and bloody clashes in the capital Manama. At least 30 people have died since Feb. 15, when the anti-government protests erupted. Four opposition supporters have also died in police custody.
For Sunni Arabs rulers around the Gulf, Bahrain is seen as a critical showdown with Shiite powerhouse Iran. Arab leaders fear that any serious political gains by Bahrain's Shiites – about 70 percent of the population – could open the door for greater influence by the Islamic Republic even though there is no history of close bonds between Iran and Bahraini Shiites.
Earlier this month, the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council issued a strongly worded warning to Iran to stop "meddling" in their affairs. Bahrain this week expelled an Iranian diplomat.
Iran, in turn, has called the Saudi-led force an "occupation" and said it reserves the right to take further diplomatic action against Bahrain.
The seven opposition supporters sentenced Thursday were tried behind closed doors on charges of premeditated murder of government employees. In an earlier hearing this week, Bahrain state media said the military prosecutor presented evidence that showed the defendants killed the policemen intentionally by running them over with a car.
Their lawyers denied the charges.
International rights groups have expressed deep concern over the verdict that followed a trial of civilians in a military court, set up under emergency laws.
"This is very worrisome by the international standards for fair trials," said Malcolm Smart, a Middle East and North Africa director with Amnesty International.
The president of the European Parliament, Jerzy Buzek, denounced the death sentences and called the closed-door trial "deplorable."
Foreign media was barred from the courtroom, but selected representatives from state-aligned media were allowed. Family members of the defendants also attended the trial.
A relative of one of the defendants sentenced to death, said there were no emotional outbursts in the courtroom when the verdicts were read.
"He was smiling when they said it, because he did not want us to cry," the relative said, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of harassment by the authorities and of jeopardizing the appeal.
A report by the Bahrain News Agency said the defendants had "all their legal rights" during the trial for what it called "one of the most gruesome murders in Bahrain."
The report carried links to government-produced videos posted on YouTube, including clips of purported confessions of alleged accomplices describing the policemen's killings. They also included testimonials from alleged relatives of one of the slain policemen and a taxi driver killed in the unrest. The footage refers to demonstrators as "gangs of outlaws" and "beasts without mercy."
Hundreds of protesters, opposition leaders and human rights activists and Shiite professionals such as doctors and lawyers have been detained since emergency rule was declared March 15. Earlier this month, the authorities banned media from covering legal proceedings in the country's military courts.
Bahrain rarely uses capital punishment, and when it does it is usually applied to foreigners. After a decade-long moratorium on the death penalty, three Bangladeshi citizens were put to death in 2006, according to Amnesty International.
Another Bangladeshi man was executed last July after being convicted of premeditated murder.