Thursday 5 May 2011

Bahrain: Military Court Sentences Protesters to Death





By Roula Hajjar | Los Angeles Times


  Peaceful Demonstrations in Bahrain

In a sharp escalation of the repression of a smoldering opposition movement, a military court in Bahrain sentenced four activists to death for the alleged murder of two police officers during pro-democracy demonstrations in March, Bahrain's official news agency reported.

This is a kind of precedent-setting case in Bahrain. The suspects are the first civilians to ever be tried in a Bahraini military court, which is called the Lower Security Court.

Three other men were sentenced to life in jail by a monarchy that has received support from Saudi Arabia and other Arabian Peninsula states to quell a mass anti-government uprising.

The trial itself bore the trademarks of the kind of shadowy security courts common in drab dictatorships such as Iran, Myanmar or Syria rather than a country that is chummy with Washington and hosts the U.S. Navy's Fifth Fleet.

During the court proceedings, the seven protestors were refused legal council and contact with relatives, activists and human rights advocates said.

At least 30 people have died, four of them members of the security forces. Hundreds of other Shiite and secular opposition figures and professionals have been detained since martial law was declared March 15.
The crackdown prompted Amnesty International to issue a briefing paper April 21 describing the developments as a "worrying trend."  "The renewed crackdown and arrests of opposition activists has been accompanied by an alarming increase in reports of torture and other ill-treatment of people detained in connection with the protests," stated the report.
 



From CSID (Center for the Study of Islam and Development) 
For more on what they Say about CSID please visit our website:  www.csidonline.org  

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