U.S. Breaks Silence on Bahrain Crackdown

  • by IPS Correspondents (washington)
  • Inter Press Service

WASHINGTON, Aug 17 (IPS) - The U.S. State Department released a statement Friday urging the Bahraini government to reconsider a ruling that sentenced the director of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, Nabeel Rajab, to a three-year jail term for organising opposition rallies.

“We are deeply concerned that a Bahraini court sentenced Nabeel Rajab to three years in prison on charges of leading ‘illegal gatherings’. We expect that the verdict and sentence will be reconsidered in the appeals process without delay. We urge the government of Bahrain to consider all available options to resolve this case,” it said.

Mariwan Hama-Saeed of Human Rights Watch welcomed the statement but told IPS that it was “long overdue”. “The U.S. should have spoken up much earlier, and still should be putting pressure on the Bahraini government to release all peaceful protestors,” he said.

He cited the first line as especially problematic: “The Government of Bahrain has committed to respect freedom of expression and assembly and we look to it to fulfill these commitments.” “Bahrain has been imprisoning innocent protestors since last year,” noted Hama-Saeed.

Rajab, who had already been serving a three-month sentence for tweeting about the unpopularity of the Bahraini prime minister, was sentenced to three years in a verdict that defence lawyers Jalila Al-Sayed and Mohamed al-Jishi claim was handed out by the judge before they could make it to court. Rajab was taken to prison before he could meet with his lawyers, or his family.

Rajab, who has more than 150,000 followers on Twitter, has been at the heart of protests since February 2011 calling for a more representative government in Bahrain. He spoke vociferously against inequities based on ethnic lines. Bahrain is ruled by the Sunni Al-Khalifa royal family, but has a Shia majority. More than 75 percent of the population is Shia.

Freedom House has rated Bahrain as “Not Free” in its “Freedom in the World 2012?, “Freedom of the Press 2012? and “Freedom on the Net 2011? reports. Reporters without Borders also ranked Bahrain 173rd in its freedom of speech index. Since February 2011, bloggers, journalists and human rights activists have been arrested and thrown into jail on trumped up charges of “inciting hatred”, “promoting sectarianism”, “disseminating false news” and “calling for the regime’s overthrow in online forums”.

Last year, a military court sentenced 21 human rights activists to lengthy terms in prison. Amidst this chaos, Rajab is on the front lines. “All Rajab did was exercise his right to assemble peacefully. The Bahraini courts have produced no evidence that proves that Rajab was inciting violence or hatred. This is a terrible ruling,” said Hama-Saeed.

Human rights group the world over urged the U.S. to speak out against the verdict. Human Rights Watch released a statement on Aug. 16 stating, “The Obama administration should raise Rajab’s case forcefully with the Bahraini government.”

© Inter Press Service (2012) — All Rights Reserved. Original source: Inter Press Service