TUE 26 - 11 - 2024
 
Date: May 23, 2011
Source: The Daily Star
Bahrain upholds two death sentences in police killings

By Adam Schreck

 

DUBAI: A special appeals court in Bahrain upheld death sentences Sunday for two people convicted of killing policemen during anti-government demonstrations in March.
The case is part of a series of closed-door trials in the Gulf island nation that have been criticized by rights groups and others opposed to the wide-ranging emergency laws used to quell demonstrations against Bahrain’s monarchy.
Two other defendants who had been sentenced to death in the case had their sentences reduced to life in prison, according to the Gulf kingdom’s official state news agency.


Three other defendants in the same case previously received life sentences.
The appeals, like the trial before it, were heard in a special security court presided over by military and civil judges. It was set up under emergency laws implemented in March during a government crackdown on the Shiite-led protests.


The security court is separately trying 21 mostly Shiite opposition leaders and political activists accused of plotting against the state. It last week sentenced a prominent Shiite cleric and eight others to 20 years in prison for the alleged kidnapping of a police officer.
The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights and other rights advocates have expressed concern about the trials in Bahrain.


Nabeel Rajab, president of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, is among those who have criticized the trials as politically motivated and lacking in transparency.
In a telephone interview Sunday, he said his house was attacked with tear gas as his family slept early the previous morning. Two tear gas canisters were shot through the windows of his home around 3:30 a.m. Saturday, and two others landed outside, he said.
Rajab blames state security forces for the attack. He said it is the second time tear gas has been hurled at his home in recent weeks. “We know it’s the government, because nobody [else] can have tear gas in this country,” he said. “This is another act of intimidation and pressure so I stop my work.”


The Bahraini government did not immediately respond to a request to comment on the allegations.
In the death penalty case, the Bahrain News Agency said the court upheld death sentences against Ali Abdullah Hassan al-Singace and Abdel-Aziz Abdel-Redha Ibrahim Hussein. It identified the defendants whose sentences were reduced as Qasim Hassan Mattar Ahmad and Saeed Abdul Jalil Saeed.
The military prosecutor presented evidence during the trial that the defendants killed the policemen intentionally by running them over with a car. The case was the first related to this year’s unrest, which was inspired by uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt.


Bahraini state media last month aired government-produced videos that including clips of purported confessions of 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.
Capital punishment is extremely rare in Bahrain and is typically not applied to the country’s citizens. Last July, a Bangladeshi man was executed after being convicted of murder.



 
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