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UN experts urge Bahrain to halt 'persecution of Shiites'

(Reuters) Experts urged Bahraini authorities to halt what they said were 'arbitrary arrests' based on religion and release those detained for free speech and assembly.
UN experts urge Bahrain to halt ‘persecution of Shiites’
Protesters holding placards with images of Bahrain's leading Shiite cleric, Isa Qassim, shout religious slogans during an anti-government protest after Friday prayers Aug. 12, 2016, in the village of Diraz, west of Manama, Bahrain. The placards read, "We sacrifice our souls for you." Photo by Hamad I Mohammed/REUTERS

GENEVA (Reuters) Bahrain is targeting its Shiite Muslim community through arrests and prosecutions of clerics, activists and entertainers, a group of United Nations-appointed independent experts said on Tuesday (Aug. 16).

In a statement, the experts urged Bahraini authorities to halt what they said were “arbitrary arrests” based on religion and release those detained for free speech and assembly.

There have been regular clashes between members Bahrain’s Shiites and security forces since the island’s Sunni rulers quashed a Shiite-led pro-democracy uprising in 2011 with military help from Saudi Arabia, among others.


A staunch U.S. ally and home to the U.S. Fifth Fleet, the kingdom blames Shiite neighbor Iran for fomenting violence on its turf, an accusation Tehran denies.

In recent months, the authorities have drawn international rebuke for waging their harshest crackdown in years on Shiite opposition groups and rights activists.

“The intensified wave of arrests, detentions, summons, interrogations and criminal charges brought against numerous Shi’ite religious clerics and singers, human rights defenders and peaceful dissidents is having a chilling effect on fundamental human rights,” the U.N. experts said.

They cited measures including the dissolution of the main opposition al-Wefaq group, the shutting of faith-based organizations and a preaching ban for some Shiite holy men.

“A wide range of charges are brought against the Shi’ites including ‘illegal gathering,’ ‘inciting hatred against the regime,’ ‘money laundering’ and ‘acts of terrorism’ in relation to their peaceful gatherings and religious congregations and peaceful expression of their beliefs, views and dissenting opinions,” the experts said.

They called these “groundless accusations used to hide a deliberate targeting of Shias in the country.”


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