http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2065198,00.html?xid=fblike

Bahrain: Is a U.S. Ally Torturing Its People?
By Karen Leigh Thursday, Apr. 14, 2011

 
Relatives film bruises on the body of Ali Isa Saqer, 31, as he is washed for 
burial, April 10, 2011. Saqer was one of three anti-government detainees the 
Interior Ministry has said died in police custody in the past week. The 
ministry said Saqer died after "creating chaos at the detention center." 

On March 17, Ibrahim Shareef, the head of the anti-government activist movement 
Waad, was snatched from his home at gunpoint by what his family describes as 
Bahraini security forces. Thrown into a waiting sport utility vehicle, he was 
driven off into the night. Today he's still missing, whereabouts unknown. 

As the island kingdom's Sunni regime continues to crack down on anti-government 
activists and prominent Shi'ites, Shareef and more than 460 others are believed 
to be in government custody. New arrests happen daily in the country, which is 
home base of the U.S. Navy's Fifth Fleet. Bahrain was designated an official 
Non-NATO ally in October 2001, after the 9/11 attacks on America. (See TIME's 
exclusive photos of the crackdown in Bahrain.)

While there have been wild rumors of the whereabouts of the arrested 
dissidents, the likely truth is dire enough. Nearly all may be held in prisons 
around Bahrain, with an unknown number undergoing questioning and torture. On 
Wednesday, opposition party al-Wefaq claimed that at least four detainees had 
been killed since April 2, from injuries sustained from police-inflicted 
torture. Human Rights Watch says another three died in March, including one man 
who arrived in custody with knees blown out by ammunition fired at close range. 

Meanwhile, press scrutiny of the regime of King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa has 
been severely hampered. Foreign media are largely shut out of the country; and 
Mansur al-Jamri, the editor of Wefaq's newspaper al Wasat, sits in custody 
alongside other journalists and bloggers. "There are concerns that heightened 
restrictions on international press and the levels of intimidation among much 
of the Shi'a community will prevent important information from getting out," 
says Jane Kinninmont, senior research fellow for the Middle East and North 
Africa at Chatham House. "Many people are scared that talking to the 
international media or human rights groups will endanger them or their 
families." 

The result has been catastrophic for the opposition. Based on accounts from 
Bahrainis who were taken into custody in the revolution's earlier days, the 
treatment of prisoners can be brutal. The corpses of recent alleged victims may 
be evidence of torture as well. According to Human Rights Watch, the body of a 
31-year-old Shi'ite activist named Ali Issa Saqer bore "signs of horrific 
abuse." The organization says the other bodies displayed signs that they too 
had met a "violent end." (See pictures of government troops routing protesters 
from Pearl Square.)

Bahrain's Interior Ministry says that Saqer died in a jailhouse rumble that got 
out of hand; it claims two others died while in custody from complications from 
sickle-cell anemia. But while the disease is common in Bahrain, neither victim 
had shown symptoms of carrying it pre-arrest. "I very much fear there will be 
more death because there is no transparency in all this," says Joe Stork, 
deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa at Human Rights Watch. 
"We're not seeing where they're being held, or their names, and it's these 
kinds of conditions that make for torture and brutality and death." 

It doesn't take much to get arrested in Bahrain these days, as the country 
operates under a reign of terror. People can be taken into custody for any 
number of reasons: speaking out against the King or vague association with 
activist groups (offenses can include carrying a Bahraini flag, deemed a symbol 
of the anti-government movement). They are routinely hauled out of their cars 
at police checkpoints after being identified as Shi'a. Once jailed, they 
reportedly face interrogators bent on getting them to incriminate themselves, 
even for nonviolent political association. The regime is taking extreme 
measures to extinguish any flicker of rebellion. "The hard line faction of the 
ruling family is [eliminating] any and all forms of political dissent," says 
Stork. "There are still raids into villages every night. It's punishment, 
creating a state of fear, so that no one will stick out their head and raise 
their voice." (See "Has Bahrain's Opposition Thrown In the Towel?")

In Manama, those who have been arrested at gunpoint and let go tell of being 
bound by their hands and feet with cables tied so tight blood circulation is 
cut off; they described being gagged and blindfolded for days. According to 
HRW, the regime has, in the past, used electro-shock devices. These include 
cattle prods and stun guns, which immobilize victims' bodies and leave visible 
marks. 

Once the torture ends, jailhouse conditions are still brutal. One leading 
activist spent six months in prison, in a cell he described as being "not much 
wider" than a bath towel. He was allowed so little contact with the outside 
world that towards the end of his imprisonment, the family was unsure if he was 
still alive. Briefly released, he was re-arrested last month, now one of the 
460 missing. 

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http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2065198,00.html#ixzz1JfnL6rzf



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