Breaking -Saudi-backed Bahraini security forces attack protesters -Medics pleas for help! -Western media censors?
14 October 2012 – The medics in prison go on hunger strike to demand that all charges are dropped and their immediate release.
Sat Oct 27, 2012 3:54PM GMT
Saudi-backed Bahraini forces have attacked anti-regime protesters in the village of Nuwaidrat, using tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse them.
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2012/10/27/269053/bahraini-forces-attack-protesters/
more info on the link below with video pleas for help
Roula is the head of nursing at the Salmaniya Medical Complex in Manama, and like many other Bahraini medics and doctors she had assisted injured protesters during the uprising in Manama.
They were then accused of inciting sectarian hatred and the overthrow of the regime. These medics were detained, tortured and harassed for nearly two months and many were initially sentenced to 15 years in prison by a military court.
The individual stories can be found on the human rights websites Doctors in chains and Physicians for human rights.
One year later, after the trial was moved to a civilian court, some medics like Roula were released and acquitted. However, without a clear motivation, the court has rejected the appeal of six remaining doctors and medics, who have been re-imprisoned with sentences ranging from one to five years.
These doctors and medics have started a hunger strike to demand their immediate release and acquittal.
Exclusively on Equal Times, Roula al-Saffar, is making an appeal to the international community to help free their colleagues.
Timeline of events
14 February 2011 – The uprisings begin at the Pearl Roundabout in the centre of Manama, Bahrain; many doctors and medics volunteer to offer assistance to injured protesters at the medical tents, under the approval of the Ministry of Health, and at the Salmaniya Hospital.
19 March 2011 – The Bahraini authorities wait a month before arresting 85 doctors and medics without warrant, taking them from their houses by armed security forces. Most of them are detained, tortured, harassed and abused for nearly two months.
13 June, 2011 – The trial at the Special Tribunal Court (military court) starts and 20 doctors and medics are sentenced to 15 years in prison. The charges include:
- Unauthorised possession of weapons and ammunition; enticing sectarian hatred; attempts to occupy buildings by force; dissemination of false news; inciting the overthrow of the regime; stealing medical equipment.
Two doctors remain in prison, while the others are released and await their verdicts.
10 May 2012 – The trial is passed on to a civilian court and the doctors present their defense pleadings.
14 June 2012 – The court delivers the verdict on the 20 Bahraini doctors and medics:
- Nine are acquitted of charges.
- Nine have their sentences reduced but file an appeal.
2 October 2012 – The court rejects the appeal and six doctors and medics are re-imprisoned:
- Dr Ali Al-Ekri, Pediatric orthopedic surgeon (five years)
- Dr Ghassan Dhaif, Maxillofacial Surgeon (one year)
- Dr Saeed Al-Samahiji, Ophthalmologist (one year)
- Dheya Ibrahim (two-month sentence – awaiting details for publication)
- Ibrahim Al Demistani (three-year sentence – awaiting details for publication)
- Ibrahim Abdullah Ibrahim (three years)
Two other medics have been in prison since 2011:
- Ahmed Almushatat (two years)
- Hassan Matooq (three years)
In a separate case, four medical professionals were convicted and are currently in detention:
- Younis Ashouri, Administrator, Muharraq Maternity Hospital (three years)
- Hassan Salman Al-Maatouq, Nurse, Salmaniya Medical Complex (three years)
- Ahmed Almushatat, Pharmacist (two years)
- Hassan Alarabi, medical student (six months)
Twenty-eight health professionals, who were accused of misdemeanors, have been released from detention but are still on trial.
14 October 2012 – The medics in prison go on hunger strike to demand that all charges are dropped and their immediate release.
http://vob.org/en/index.php?show=news&action=article&id=1959
Where’s the News Coverage of Bahrain?

Don’t hear much about Bahrain?
Thousands of opposition demonstrators hit the streets there little over a week ago, while security forces faced off with activists at a flashpoint village just yesterday as unrest continues to roil the Gulf kingdom, a nation so strategically located it plays host to the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet.
Wait a second. Geopolitically critical nation—check. Protests against the government—check. Sexy Twitter feed about demonstrations—check. Youth bulge—check. Key activists imprisoned—check. Demand for a more representative government—check.
Isn’t this where CNN starts panning massive crowds like those seen in Egpyt’s Tahrir Square last year? Isn’t this where the microphone is held up to the lips of a cute female twenty-something protester? Where’s the love?
There are a few reasons why Bahrain has emerged as the Arab Spring’s neglected child: for one, heavyweights like Sunni Saudi Arabia disapprove of the protest movement there. Riyadh’s ties to the Sunni royal family in the Bahraini capital of Manama go way back. And naturally, the Sunni nation is not enamored with the prospect of a new government sympathetic to the nation’s overwhelmingly Shiite population. No friend for the movement there—but they don’t have to look far for support. Nearby Iran, where a Shiite theocracy runs the show, has been vocal in its support and is rumored to be close with one of the main Bahraini opposition parties. The Islamic Republic’s politically radioactive profile has complicated public relations for the opposition despite its efforts to distance itself. Add rumors that protesters are getting weapons from the Iran-allied Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, and it’s a real tough sell.
Then there was the perceived “Arab Spring” fatigue on the part of the Western public. They saw governments toppled in Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Yemen, and then, hardly stopping for breath, the crisis in Syria started to unfold into the catastrophe it is today. The media narrative moved on, leaving the interested parties—among them Iran’s state press—to monitor developments.
Bahrain is a sensitive issue in the region, and the West knows it. Why should the United States and Europe risk enraging oil-wealthy Saudi Arabia, which feels so strongly about Bahrain that it sent 1,000 troops there to aid the government’s suppression of dissent? Saudi Arabia lashed out on October 15th against a British parliamentary inquiry into UK relations with Saudi Arabia and Bahrain in light of the unrest, with “insulted” Saudi officials saying they were “re-evaluating” UK relations. Clearly the probe had touched a nerve. Meanwhile, support for the embattled opposition from, say, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, has hardly been robust—especially after the US resumed weapons sales to Bahrain’s rulers last May.
As for the more altruistic argument in favor of civilian-led governments, what if Saudi Arabia is right and the protests in Bahrain are really just a move for power by Shiite Iran, a longstanding rival for dominance in the region?
Frederic Wehrey of the Carnegie Endowment for Peace visited Bahrain four months ago and says that’s not the case. “Bahrain is not a proxy battlefield” between Saudi Arabia and Iran, he said, adding that the main opposition accused of cooperating with the Islamic Republic has made a point of keeping “Iran at arm’s length.”
He says there is “very little evidence” of concrete Iranian assistance to Bahrain’s mostly Shiite opposition, whom he describes as “nationalists.” Yes, Saudi Arabia does not want the situation in Bahrain to “give Iran an opening,” Wehrey said, “but the Iran issue is mostly used as an excuse—the real issue is democratization.”
Not everyone shares Wehrey’s position. The Council of Foreign Relations’ Ed Husain raised eyebrows after he wrote a series of tweets seen as friendly to the royal family during a visit there several months ago. His neutrality on Bahrain has since been called into question, but he insists the situation there is not “just a straightforward demand for democracy,” asking the US: “Do we really want to hand over Bahrain to the Iranian sphere of influence?” That, he claims, “is the bottom line in Bahrain.”
Well, the bottom line is really that every “Arab Spring” protest movement has been fueled by a variety of actors, not all of whom would have passed muster under Western scrutiny. Plus, isn’t that what good reporting is all about? Who exactly is behind Bahrain’s protest movement? Fewer journalists seem interested in that part of the story.
Wehrey says there are basically two main groups: the February 14 Youth Movement and the pro-Shia establishment opposition party Al-Wefaq. The two are increasingly at odds, he says, with the youth-led February 14, a group active on the ground as well as on platforms like Twitter and Facebook, seeking bolder reforms than those called for by Al-Wefaq, a group that has been careful to keep its demands within the context of the ruling monarchical system.
Indeed, there is plenty going on in Bahrain these days, as evidenced by the alarming number of human rights reports protesting the Sunni monarchy’s brutal crackdown on the opposition. Despite the outcry and the bravery of young protest leaders like Zainab Al-Khawaja and Naji Fateel, who was reportedly arrested yesterday, the media—and thus, the rest of us—are left to buy the ruling monarchy’s line.
Photo Credit: Sara Hassan via Al Jazeera English
http://www.worldaffairsjournal.org/blog/kristin-deasy/wheres-news-coverage-bahrain
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