Urgent Appeal: Women And Girls Detained In Bahrain

11 Oct 2011
Sixteen women and four girls, detained on 23 September,are being tried on charges which include ‘illegal gathering’, and “incitement to hatred of the regime”. Some claim they have
been tortured in detention and their lawyers have not been allowed to visit them. They maybe prisoners of conscience if convicted.

On 23 September Bahraini security forces arrested 38 women and seven girls in a city center mall in Manama. They were preparing to take part in a protest march that was heading for the GCC Roundabout (formerly Pearl Roundabout).

11 Oct 2011
Sixteen women and four girls, detained on 23 September,are being tried on charges which include ‘illegal gathering’, and “incitement to hatred of the regime”. Some claim they have
been tortured in detention and their lawyers have not been allowed to visit them. They maybe prisoners of conscience if convicted.

On 23 September Bahraini security forces arrested 38 women and seven girls in a city center mall in Manama. They were preparing to take part in a protest march that was heading for the GCC Roundabout (formerly Pearl Roundabout).

The women and girls were arrested without arrest warrants and interrogated without the presence of lawyers. Some of them allege that they were tortured or otherwise ill-treated during interrogation. Most of the group was released, but 16 women and four girls were formally charged. The charges include illegal gathering, incitement to hatred of the regime and assaulting security officers. Two of the women have been released on bail and 14 remain in prison in ‘Issa Town, south of Manama. The four girls were released on bail.

The trials of all 16 women and four girls began on 3 October before a lower criminal court and a juvenile court respectively. A second session followed on 6 October, and a third on 10 October. The defendants were only allowed to meet their lawyers in court. Their lawyers have requested to visit them in prison but have received no answer. A lawyer told Amnesty International that several requests to bring defense witnesses to the court had been rejected.

Amnesty International is not aware of any evidence that the accused used or advocated violence. They may all be prisoners of conscience if convicted solely on the basis of the legitimate exercise of their rights to freedom of expression, association and assembly. As such Amnesty International would call for their immediate and unconditional release.

Please write immediately in English or Arabic:

 Express concern that the defendants may be prisoners of conscience imprisoned solely for legitimately exercising their the rights to freedom of expression, association and assembly, and call for the immediate and unconditional release of all prisoners of conscience being held in Bahrain;
 Urge the authorities to immediately set up an independent investigation into the alleged torture or other illtreatment of some of the defendants, to make its results public, and bring to justice anyone responsible for torture;
 Allow defendants unhindered access to their lawyers.

PLEASE SEND APPEALS BEFORE 26 NOVEMBER 2011 TO:

King
Shaikh Hamad bin ‘Issa Al Khalifa
Office of His Majesty the King
P.O. Box 555
Rifa’a Palace, Manama,
BAHRAIN
Fax: 011 973 1766 4587

Minister of Justice and Islamic Affairs
Shaikh Khaled bin Ali Al Khalifa
Ministry of Justice and Islamic Affairs
P. O. Box 450, Manama,
BAHRAIN
Fax: 011 973 17531284
Salutation: Your Excellence
Salutation: Your Majesty

Also send copies to:
Ambassador Houda Ezra Ebrahim Nonoo, Embassy of the Kingdom of Bahrain, 3502 International Drive. NW, Washington DC 20008
Tel: 202 342 1111 ǀ Fax: 1 202 362 2192 ǀ Email: ambsecretary@bahrainembassy.org

Please check with the AIUSA Urgent Action Office if sending appeals after the above date.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

At least 500 people have been detained in Bahrain in relation to the pro-reform protests which began in February. Four people have died in custody in suspicious circumstances. Dozens of those detained have been brought to trial before military courts, which have convicted a number of defendants, handing down sentences ranging from short prison terms to, in two cases so far, the death penalty. A state of emergency imposed by the Bahraini authorities on 15 March – known as the State of National Safety – was lifted on 1 June.

People in Bahrain continue to be arbitrarily arrested, often without warrant, by state officials who fail to identify themselves. Many are held for weeks or even months – often in solitary confinement – in detention centers outside of the control of the Judiciary, in prolonged incommunicado detention without access to families or lawyers, and in conditions amounting to enforced disappearances. Unlawful killings, and the all too frequent reports of torture and other ill-treatment by state actors who enjoy near total impunity, are still not being investigated.

Name(s): Group of Bahraini women and girls (f)
Issue(s): Legal concern, Incommunicado detention, Freedom of expression, Torture and ill-treatment

UA: 302/11
Issue Date: 11 October 2011
Country: Bahrain

amnestyusa.org