Hehehe... kan lu udah ngebual soal cewek Iraq diperkosa tentara Amrik.




________________________________
From: ndeboost <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sun, April 17, 2011 4:25:42 PM
Subject: [proletar] Re: Bahrain: Is a U.S. Ally Torturing Its People?

   
Orang Islam dilarang tarohan.
Namun kalau kamu yg mau kaing-kaing ga ada yg ngelarang.

"..Ditambah dgn bumbu merkosa cewek Bahrain jg..."
Sambil "mainan" semprong, terus berkhayal.
Silahkan diterusin, ga ada yg bakal ngelarang.

--- In [email protected], item abu <itemabu@...> wrote:
>
> Gua berani tarohan si ndeboost dan orang2 Islam lainnya beberapa bln
lagi akan
> kaing2 bhw Amriklah yg nyiksa orang Bahrain, bukan orang Arab.
Ditambah dgn
> bumbu merkosa cewek Bahrain jg.
>
>
>
>
>
> ________________________________
> From: sunny ambon@...
> To: Undisclosed-Recipient@...
> Sent: Sat, April 16, 2011 3:36:37 PM
> Subject: [proletar] Bahrain: Is a U.S. Ally Torturing Its People?
>
>
>
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.
>
>
> See the 2011 TIME 100 poll.
>
> See the 140 best Twitter feeds.
>
> Read more:
>
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2065198,00.html#ixzz1JfnL6\
rzf
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>


 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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