NEW YORK — Bahrain should immediately release two “unjustly imprisoned” regime opponents, Human Rights Watch said Thursday, urging the kingdom’s allies London and Washington to intervene on their behalf.
Ibrahim Sharif, an activist who spent four years in jail over his involvement in 2011 anti-government protests, has been on trial since August for “promoting political change through forceful means.” His re-arrest in July followed a speech he made at a ceremony for a victim of the unrest that shook the kingdom in 2011, following pro-democracy protests.
The head of the Al-Wefaq opposition bloc, Ali Salman, was sentenced in June to four years in prison after he was convicted of inciting disobedience and hatred. An appeals court is reviewing that conviction while the prosecution is demanding the annulment of his acquittal in the charge of plotting to overthrow the regime and a tougher sentence.
The United States and Britain “are fully aware of the gross unfairness of Salman’s trial and the content of Sharif’s peaceful speeches and this should give them good reason to call publicly for an end to their prosecutions and their immediate release,” HRW deputy Middle East director Joe Stork said. Both regime opponents will face new hearings in their trials next week.
Leave a Reply