Bahraini doctors targeted by Khalifa regime

July 19, 2011 - 0:0

Bahraini security forces loyal to King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa attacked doctors and nurses, lay siege to hospitals and clinics, detained protesters who sought treatment, and arrested and prosecuted dozens of medical personnel after unrest hit the island kingdom in February, a prominent human rights organization has alleged.

Since mid-March, when the government stifled the uprising, the government has arrested more than 70 medical professionals, including several dozen doctors, and has put 48 on trial in a special military court, Human Rights Watch alleged in a 24-page report released on Monday.
The organization called on Bahrain to stop harassing medical personnel, withdraw all security forces from health centers and release all those facing minor charges, while providing due process to those accused of more serious crimes.
The report also called on the United Nations to conduct an independent investigation into the government crackdown.
“The Bahraini government's violent campaign of intimidation against the medical community and its interference in the provision of vital medical assistance to injured protesters is one of the most egregious aspects of its brutal repression of the pro-democracy protest movement,” the report stated.
Hospital became battleground
Pro-democracy protests began in Manama, the capital, on February 14. They spread to other villages and brought Manama's central Pearl Roundabout to a standstill until March 15, when a Saudi Arabia-led military force assembled by the Persian Gulf Cooperation Council at Bahrain's request arrived to put down the uprising.
Protesters complained of corruption and the authoritarian rule of King Hamad's family. Many were Shia, the majority sect in Bahrain, and called for an end to what they said was endemic discrimination at the hands of the ruling Sunni minority.
Most of the casualties of the protests were treated at Salmaniya Medical Complex (SMC), the largest hospital in Bahrain, which at times became a battleground and protest site.
Researchers from the organization were able to interview more than 75 medical professionals, patients and family members before leaving Bahrain on April 20. They have not been allowed to return.
According to Al Jazeera, the report was consistent with the events he witnessed and heard described during his time in the country, but that abuses had continued after March, when the report ends.
Trained doctors and nurses became “undercover medics,” putting on plain clothes and using code words to get information from Shia towns where security forces conducted violent sweeps.
Many injured protesters refused to seek medical attention in clinics and hospitals for fear of being detained or beaten by security forces.
The Bahraini government has denied that it allowed wide-ranging abuse of medical personnel and injured protesters. It has said that some medical workers were conspiring to overthrow the government and that weapons were stored inside the hospital and in ambulances.
Attacks on medical personnel began almost as soon as demonstrations did, according to Monday's report. On February 17, police moved in on the Pearl Roundabout protesters without warning, firing tear gas, rubber bullets and pellets.
Laying siege to medical clinics
After the Persian Gulf Cooperation Council force moved into Bahrain to quash the uprising, the crackdown on medical personnel entered a new phase, according to the report.
On March 15 and 16, security forces surrounded a health centre in Sitra, one of the country's larger Shia towns, and then commandeered the SMC. Men armed with pistols and automatic rifles, some of them masked, effectively put the SMC into “lockdown,” the report said, and began ordering many of the injured protesters to the sixth floor, where they had control.
The Bahraini military began “calling all the shots”, a doctor told Human Rights Watch. The situation was much the same at other clinics in the country.
Security forces wrote down the names of doctors who helped protesters, entered operating theatres to confiscate phones and other recording devices, decided when some of the injured would receive surgery, and removed or beat those they suspected were involved in demonstrations.
Some doctors and nurses spoke openly with the media and criticized the government and their own employer for what they believed was an inadequate response to the attacks on protesters.
There are 48 medical professionals on trial for protest-related crimes. Human Rights Watch says they have had little to no access to lawyers and family members.
Since the crackdown, hundreds of detainees, including doctors, remain in custody facing politically motivated trials, Human Rights Watch said. Around 30 people are believed to have died during the uprising, while more than 500 were injured.
Photo: Anti-government protests that often broke along sectarian lines erupted in the island kingdom in February. (EPA photo)