Lihat videonya:

http://aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2011/05/2011512111835943173.html    
         
Middle East
Security forces target Bahrain medics

Part two of our exclusive report on Bahrain looks at the abuse of medical 
workers as part of the government's crackdown.
Last Modified: 12 May 2011 16:36



An Al Jazeera investigation has found evidence that Bahrain's security forces 
are torturing medical workers to force criminal confessions.

Since pro-democracy protests erupted in the Gulf kingdom in February, doctors 
and nurses have been targeted, with hundreds facing arrest, Charles Stratford 
reports in this Al Jazeera exclusive.

The government of Bahrain deployed security forces onto the streets on March 14 
in an attempt to quell more than four weeks of protests.

Medics working to save the lives of hundreds of wounded demonstrators were 
among those threatened and arrested.

Forty-seven health workers, 24 doctors and 23 nurses have been charged since 
the protests began, while 150 more are reportedly under investigation by the 
government.

Some medics reported being taken from their homes by armed masked men.

"We were blindfolded for about 10 hours. Only at the time when [we] were 
videotaped did they take the blindfolds off," one medic told Al Jazeera's 
Stratford.
Click here for more of our special coverage

"When we started to talk, if they didn't like the things that we were saying 
they stopped us and told us again that we should say this this and this."

The health workers now face trial on charges that include inciting hatred 
against the Bahraini government.

"Those people who interfered with the accessibility of the hospital to the 
population of Bahrain are the guys who are responsible for a criminal act and 
disobedience of the civil service rules of the government of Bahrain," Mohamed 
Amin Alawadi, the chief of medical staff at Salmaniya medical complex, told Al 
Jazeera in response to claims the medical staff were targeted because they 
treated Shia protesters.

Sabah al-Mukhtar, from the Arab Lawyers Association, told Al Jazeera: "There is 
a presumption that the judiciary is independent but if the legislation ties the 
hand of the judiciary in this case the judiciary cannot do very much."

"I think the judiciary in Bahrain will be just as bad as the other third world 
countries generally speaking," he said.

Al Jazeera has been trying to contact the Bahraini government for response to 
the latest allegations but has heard nothing from the officials so far.

Earlier, Bahraini officials denied an Al Jazeera report that police had carried 
out raids on girls' schools, detaining them and beating them, during its 
crackdown against pro-democracy protesters.

"The allegations made by Al Jazeera English are totally baseless and without 
credibility," sources quoted by the Bahraini news agency said.

Bahraini authorities were responding to the first exclusive report by Charles 
Stratford, where secret filming by our correspondent revealed shocking evidence 
of the state's brutal crackdown on dissent.

This is the second in a series of exclusive reports from Bahrain.
Source:
Al Jazeera




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