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Rights Groups Fear for Bahraini Activist Nabeel Rajab's Health in Prison, AFP

2018-01-26 - 7:25 p

Bahrain Mirror (AFP): International rights groups said Thursday they fear for the health behind bars of Bahrain's most high-profile activist, Nabeel Rajab, condemning the Gulf state over its seven-year crackdown on dissent.

Rajab, a leading figure in 2011 protests that erupted in Bahrain, was sentenced to two years in jail last July for "disseminating rumours and false information" in television interviews critical of the government.


He also faces a potential 15-year sentence in a second case linked to tweets in which he criticised Saudi Arabia and its allies, including Bahrain, over their military intervention in the Yemen war.

A statement released by a regional rights group, the Gulf Center for Human Rights, the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT) and the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) said the Bahraini government had denied healthcare to and "detained, imprisoned, tortured... or forced into exile" a number of prominent dissidents.

The organisations said Rajab, who has been hospitalised multiple times in recent years, had been advised not to take his medication over fears the government had interfered with the treatment.

Bahraini officials were not immediately reachable for comment.

"Recently alarming signals have multiplied raising security concerns regarding his detention condition," said Dimitris Christopoulos, president of FIDH, an international consortium of 184 non-governmental organisations from around the world.

"The government should put a stop to these tactics, and immediately release him. We seriously fear for his life".

The groups also called for an international independent examination.

"The Bahraini authorities should allow an international independent medical examination of Nabeel Rajab and the results of this examination to be duly recorded and accessible by his family," said Gerald Staberock, the OMCT secretary general.

"Nabeel Rajab´s life is at serious risk and he should receive urgently the medical treatment he needs by a trusted medical institution," he said.

Located between Saudi Arabia and its arch-rival Iran, Shiite-majority Bahrain has been ruled for more than 200 years by the Sunni Al-Khalifa dynasty.

The kingdom is home to the US Navy's Fifth Fleet and a British military base that is still under construction.

Since 2011, authorities have jailed dozens of high-profile activists and disbanded both religious and secular opposition groups.

They have also stripped hundreds of their citizenship, making many stateless, according to Amnesty International.

The government has drawn harsh criticism from rights groups, including Amnesty and Human Rights Watch, over its treatment of protesters and prisoners.

The Bahraini government accuses Iran of backing the protests and attempting to overthrow the government. Tehran denies involvement.

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