Amnesty International Report 2009 on Bahrain, a Non-Arab Country

Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis
Bahrain cannot be a member state of the Arab League, and Arabic cannot be the official language of the insular state. The indigenous majority speaks Farsi, adhere to Shia Islam, and cannot accept the Pan-Arabist tyranny that English colonial gangsters worked hard and for long to install via their stooges, namely the besotted, ignorant, barbaric and alien elements who migrated from the peninsula in order to be properly used by their anti-Islamic masters.

In the same way the entities formed in the Asiatic part of the Middle East after the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire and the rise of Kemal Ataturk in Turkey are all fake, and the various existing pseudo-states belong in fact to Turkey, Bahrain belongs to Iran. It is true that for a brief period of time, Bahrain belonged to the Ottoman Empire, but this was the result of the fact that Istanbul attempted to save parts of the Islamic world from the clutches of the criminal Anglo-French colonials after the collapse of the Qajar imperial dynasty of Iran.

In fact, the ethnic background of the Bahrainis is Aramaean, as following many millennia of Sumerian, Elamite and Babylonian presence, Aramaean merchants made of the island an important outpost in the sea route to China already during the late Axhaemenid times. The island was inhabited by Aramaeans for approximately a millennium, down to the moment of the Islamic explosion.

Nestorian Christians constituted the outright majority of the local population in the first decades of Islam; this in itself bears witness to Aramaean presence and identity. Within the vast Sassanid Empire of Iran, the Nestorians were all Aramaeans or Central Asiatic populations, because the Persians never accepted Oriental Christianity.

Today, the basic issues that determine the sociopolitical developments in the colonial tyranny of Bahrain are similar with the problems existing in Qatar, Kuwait and the UAE, namely historical identity, cultural and religious individuality, linguistic integrity, and social representativeness. As long as these critical issues are not dealt with, Bahrain will remain a Pan-Arabist tyranny imposed by an alien dynasty that proved to be the puppets of the enemies of both, Islam and Oriental Christianity.

I herewith republish the Amnesty International report 2009 on Bahrain that illuminates some of the dramas lived in the fake model of progress and prosperity, the insular Hell of Bahrain.

Amnesty International Report 2009 on Bahrain

http://thereport.amnesty.org/en/regions/middle-east-north-africa/bahrain

Head of state: King Hamad bin ´Issa Al Khalifa

Head of government: Shaikh Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa

Death penalty: retentionist

Population: 766,000

Life expectancy: 75.2 years

Under-5 mortality (m/f): 14/14 per 1,000

Adult literacy: 86.5 per cent

Amnesty International Report 2009 on Bahrain

The authorities failed adequately to investigate allegations of torture and other ill-treatment of detainees. Government critics were briefly detained and several websites were closed down. One person was executed. The government indicated it would decriminalize certain publishing offences, reduce legal discrimination against women and introduce other reforms.

Background

There were renewed, violent protests in March and April by members of the majority Shi´a population against what they alleged was discrimination, especially by the police and security forces, and the stalling of political reforms initiated by the King in 2001 and 2002. One policeman was killed and scores of people were arrested. Nineteen faced trial. Thirteen others who were charged with arson and rioting were among a group pardoned by the King in July but still detained at the end of the year. They were reported to have refused to sign official documents authorizing their release because they considered that all charges against them should be dropped unconditionally.


Excerpt

"A number of websites were closed because they contained articles criticizing the royal family..."

International scrutiny and legal developments

Bahrain´s human rights record was examined in April under the UN Human Rights Council´s system of Universal Periodic Review.

The government made significant human rights commitments, including to establish a national human rights institution, withdraw reservations made when Bahrain ratified certain human rights treaties, reform family and nationality laws, and adopt new legislation to protect women domestic workers and lift restrictions on the press.

Torture and other ill-treatment

Detainees held in connection with violent protests in the villages of Karzakhan and Demestan in March and April alleged that they were tortured and otherwise ill-treated by police. They said they were held incommunicado for a week during which they were made to stand for excessive periods, blindfolded and beaten.

Fifteen people arrested in December 2007 and accused of burning a police car and stealing a weapon alleged that they were tortured. Five were sentenced to between five and seven years´ imprisonment by the High Criminal Court in July; six were sentenced to one year in prison but were pardoned by the King; and four were acquitted. Among those acquitted was Mohammad Mekki Ahmad, aged 20, who was detained incommunicado for 12 days at the Criminal Investigations Department in Manama, where he alleges he was tortured by being suspended, beaten and subjected to electric shocks. A medical report, requested by the High Criminal Court and submitted to it in April, noted that some of the defendants had marks on their bodies which might have been caused by torture. The government failed to order an independent investigation into the torture allegations.

Freedom of expression

The government proposed to amend the 2002 Press and Publications Law to remove imprisonment as a penalty for offences such as criticizing the King and "inciting hatred of the regime". The Shura (Consultative) Council added amendments in May. All the amendments were submitted to the House of Representatives.

In June, Abdullah Hassan Bu-Hassan was detained for three days in connection with his writings in The Democrat, published by the Democratic National Action Society. The same month, seven contributors to the Awal website and al-Wifaq Islamic Society´s newsletter were briefly detained and accused of "inciting hatred and insulting the regime". A number of websites were closed because they contained articles criticizing the royal family and the government.

In November, the Interior Minister was reported to have announced that Bahraini nationals, including parliamentarians and NGO members, would be required to seek advance authorization before attending meetings abroad to discuss Bahrain´s internal affairs, and that those who failed to do so could be imprisoned or fined.

Death penalty

A Bangladeshi national, Mizan Noor Al Rahman Ayoub Miyah, convicted of murdering his employer, was executed in August.

In December, Bahrain abstained on a UN General Assembly resolution calling for a worldwide moratorium on executions.

Amnesty International visits

An Amnesty International delegate visited Bahrain in October and met government officials, parliamentarians, human rights activists, journalists, former detainees and lawyers. In November an Amnesty International delegate attended a follow-up meeting hosted by the Bahraini government on the implementation of the recommendations of the UN Universal Periodic Review session in April.

Note

Picture:

To mark the 6th anniversary of Guantanamo Bay on Friday 11 January 2008, Amnesty International in Bahrain organise an action.
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Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis

Orientalist, Historian, Political Scientist, Dr. Megalommatis, 53, is the author of 12 books, dozens of scholarly articles, hundreds of encyclopedia entries, and thousands of articles. He speaks, reads and writes more than 15, modern and ancient, languages. He refuted Greek nationalism, supported Martin Bernal´s Black Athena, and rejected the Greco-Romano-centric version of History. He pleaded for the European History by J. B. Duroselle, and defended the rights of the Turkish, Pomak, Macedonian, Vlachian, Arvanitic, Latin Catholic, and Jewish minorities of Greece.

Born Christian Orthodox, he adhered to Islam when 36, devoted to ideas of Muhyieldin Ibn al Arabi. Greek citizen of Turkish origin, Prof. Megalommatis studied and/or worked in Turkey, Greece, France, England, Belgium, Germany, Syria, Israel, Iraq, Iran, Egypt and Russia, and carried out research trips throughout the Middle East, Northeastern Africa and Central Asia. His career extended from Research & Education, Journalism, Publications, Photography, and Translation to Website Development, Human Rights Advocacy, Marketing, Sales & Brokerage. He traveled in more than 80 countries in 5 continents.

He defends the Human and Civil Rights of Yazidis, Aramaeans, Turkmen, Oromos, Ogadenis, Sidamas, Berbers, Afars, Anuak, Furis (Darfur), Bejas, Balochs, Tibetans, and their Right to National Independence, demands international recognition for Kosovo, Abkhazia, South Ossetia, the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, and Transnistria, calls for National Unity in Somalia, and denounces Islamic Terrorism.

Freedom and National Independence for Catalonia, Scotland, Corsica, Euskadi (Bask Land), and (illegally French) Polynesia!

Break Down the Persian Tyranny of the Ayatullahs of Iran!

Freedom for 25 million Azeris in Southern Azerbaijan!

Selected links to online editions of Prof. M. S. Megalommatis´ books and articles: http://community.webshots.com/user/hannoedmegalommatis; http://community.webshots.com/user/wenamunedmegalommatis; http://community.webshots.com/user/redseamegalommatis; http://community.webshots.com/user/tudelamegalommatis; http://community.webshots.com/user/megalommatis; http://community.webshots.com/user/turkeygreecemegalommatis; http://community.webshots.com/user/greeceturkeymegalommatis; http://community.webshots.com/user/seapeoplesmegalommatis; http://community.webshots.com/user/megalommatisegyptaegean; http://community.webshots.com/user/christianitymegalommatis;
http://community.webshots.com/user/megalommatisinarabic;
http://community.webshots.com/user/megalommatisvaria