By Ali Khalil
gence France Press
DUBAI: Bahrain persists in persecuting members of its Shiite majority in “systematic” human rights violations, seven weeks after crushing a month-long pro-democracy protest, activists say.
Shiites face fast-tracked martial courts, continued detention of hundreds, demolition of mosques and arbitrary dismissal of employees in the Sunni-ruled kingdom, they say. At least 567 people, including 38 women, remain in detention, said former MP Matar Matar, out of around 1,000 people rounded up after security forces quelled the protest March 16.
“We are in touch with international organizations to highlight the systematic violations by the authorities,” he said, claiming the government was taking advantage of “international silence” over the violations. “This fast campaign shows authorities are trying to use this time that is available as much as possible … No one knows when the international silence about Bahrain will end,” Matar said.
He also expressed fears that seven Shiite protesters may be sentenced to death by a military court Thursday over charges they killed two policemen in clashes as the Shiite-dominated protest was crushed. The Bahrain Center for Human Rights put the number of detainees at 817, including 71 women. “This is a new phenomenon in Bahrain,” said BCHR head Nabil Rajab.
One woman who spoke to AFP said she was threatened with rape if she did not confess to taking part in protests. “You’d better confess. Otherwise, I’d take you to the other interrogation room where men would make you talk,” she said, quoting an officer’s threat.
The woman was dragged from work along with other Shiite colleagues. In the bus to the police station, policewomen slapped them and made them chant pro-monarchy slogans, she said.
She said she shared a cell with several doctors, nurses and teachers. While being released, she said she saw teenage female students being dragged into a police station and beaten mercilessly by policewomen.
Bahraini authorities have been condemned by several international rights groups for clamping down on medical staff, mainly at Manama’s Salmaniya Medical Complex, with medics punished for siding with protesters. Although security forces showed restraint in driving protesters from Pearl Square, the authorities later unleashed police on Shiite dissidents nationwide.
“We can call this now a regime of sectarian separation that is working on a sectarian purge” of Shiites, Rajab charged, citing raids on schools and medical centers where Shiites were told to line up separately from Sunnis. Matar, who quit Parliament along with 17 other MPs in the Al-Wefaq Shiite opposition group in February in protest at violence against protesters, also spoke of Shiite employees being sacked if said to have taken part in demonstrations, claiming more than 1,000 Shiite employees had been fired.
“Police raid medical centers and separate employees based on their sects, then order Shiites to stand by the wall and put their arms up … while masked informers point out” those who joined the protests, he said. The government admits dismissing workers. The Health Ministry said Tuesday it had referred for prosecution 30 employees among those suspended because of “recent events,” after a probe found that they committed acts that “appeared criminal.”
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