Kuwait Times

Bahrain upholds 5-year jail term of activist Rajab

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DUBAI: A Bahraini appeals court yesterday upheld a five-year jail sentence in a case against high-profile activist Nabeel Rajab linked to social media, a rights group and family member said. Rajab, a leading figure in 2011 protests against the Gulf state’s Sunniminor­ity monarchy, was convicted of insulting the state, “deliberate­ly disseminat­ing ... false or malicious news” and “publicly offending a foreign country”, a reference to Saudi Arabia.

The charges are linked to tweets and retweets made via Rajab’s account and critical of the Saudiled coalition, including Bahrain, fighting in Yemen in support of its beleaguere­d government since 2015. He also tweeted criticism of the Bahraini government’s treatment of prisoners. Tuesday’s verdict, reported by the London-based Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy and confirmed to AFP by a family member of Rajab, can still be appealed at Bahrain’s Court of Cassation, its highest court.

Rights groups were swift to condemn the verdict, with Amnesty Internatio­nal describing it as “outrageous” and calling for Rajab’s immediate release. “The Bahraini Court of Appeal has missed a vital opportunit­y to do the right thing and set Nabeel Rajab free,” said Lynn Maalouf, Amnesty’s director of Middle East research. “His ongoing detention is further proof of the Bahraini authoritie­s’ relentless determinat­ion to squash the right to freedom of expression... It is absolutely outrageous that he has to spend another single day behind bars solely for expressing his opinion online.”

The Internatio­nal Federation for Human Rights said the conviction showed Rajab was “a political prisoner, subject to degrading treatment and who has to be silenced at any price”. Bahrain, a Shiitemajo­rity country located between regional rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran, has been ruled for more than two centuries by the Al-Khalifa dynasty. Authoritie­s have jailed dozens of high-profile activists and disbanded both religious and secular opposition groups since protests demanding political change erupted in 2011.

They have stripped hundreds of those convicted of their citizenshi­p, leaving many stateless. The Bahraini government has accused Iranian authoritie­s of backing the protest movement in a bid to overthrow it. Tehran denies involvemen­t. Amnesty has categorize­d Rajab as a prisoner of conscience, and leading rights groups around the world have condemned his trials as an attack on freedom of expression.

Rajab is already serving a two-year sentence for “disseminat­ing rumors and false informatio­n” in television interviews critical of the government. He has served multiple stints in prison since 2012, all linked to his role in the protests. Bahrain, playing a key military role in the Gulf, is home to the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet and a British military base. US President Donald Trump has eased restrictio­ns on arms sales to Bahrain since taking office in January last year.

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