No Script

Please Wait...

Al-Ahed Telegram

AI: Bahrain Detains, Abuses, Tortures and Threatens Children with Rape

AI: Bahrain Detains, Abuses, Tortures and Threatens Children with Rape
folder_openBahrain access_time10 years ago
starAdd to favorites

Local Editor

Amnesty International accused Bahrain on Monday of torturing children who have been arrested on suspicion of participating in the anti-government protests.

"Children are being routinely detained, ill-treated and tortured in Bahrain," said AI in a briefing.

Scores of children arrested on suspicion of participating in anti-government protests - including some as young as 13 - were blindfolded, beaten and tortured in detention over the past two years the organization said. Others were threatened with rape in order to extract forced confessions.
"By rounding up suspected under-age offenders and locking them up, Bahrain's authorities are displaying an appalling disregard for its international human rights obligations," said Said Boumedouha, Deputy Director of Amnesty International's Middle East and North Africa Program.

She further added: "Nearly three years after Bahrain's security forces used excessive force to crush anti-government protests, they now appear to be targeting children in an intensified crackdown. All children under the age of 18 who have not committed any recognizable offence must be released immediately. Any allegations of torture and ill-treatment must be thoroughly investigated."
According to reports received by Amnesty International there are at least 110 children aged between 16 and 18 held at the Dry Dock Prison, an adult facility in al-Muharraq Island, pending investigation or trial.

Most children have been arrested on suspicion of participating in "illegal gatherings", rioting, burning tires or throwing Molotov cocktails at police. Many were seized during raids while they were playing at home and even at a local swimming pool. Several were denied access to their families for extended periods and interrogated without their lawyers.

Children under the age of 15 who have been sentenced are held at a Juvenile Centre in Manama under Ministry of Interior control. During the day they are attended by social workers but at night, when most abuses tend to take place, Bahraini police take over. At the age of 15 those held in the Juvenile Centre are transferred to adult prisons such as Jaw Prison in southeast Bahrain to serve the remaining prison sentences.

Bahrain is a signatory to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child which defines a child as anyone below the age of 18. The convention also explicitly prohibits the torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.

In August, Bahrain's juvenile law was amended to indicate that the parents of anyone under the age of 15 who takes part in a demonstration, public gathering or sit-in would receive a written warning from the Ministry of Interior. If a second offence is recorded within six months the child's father could face jail, a fine or both.
"Bahrain's government purports to respect human rights yet it is brazenly flouting international obligations on a routine basis by resorting to extreme measures such as imposing harsh prison sentences on children," said Said Boumedouha.
Meanwhile, AI urged on Bahrain to consider alternative penalties for children who have committed internationally recognizable criminal offences such as probation and community service.

Source: AI, Edited by website team