1/12 Bahrain is one of the gulf countries being hit with missiles, and as people follow the news, it’s important you understand the country, its context and history:
The indigenous population of Bahrain are the Baharna (بحارنة) – mostly made up of Arab Shia (it was one of the first countries to become Shia in the region in the 7th century). The Alkhalifa family (from the Bani Utbah tribe) occupied Bahrain by force in 1783 coming from Zubara (modern day Qatar) and have been ruling with violence since then. During the 2011 uprising one of the prominent chants was “go back to Zubara, your visit is over”, as the Bahrainis consider themselves occupied. This makes Bahrain the oldest ongoing occupation in the region.
2/12 Around 30 years after their violent take-over, the Alkhalifas struck a deal with the British to become a protectorate (to protect them from the indigenous population). During their rule, the Alkhalifas depended on the UK and US to maintain full control, oppress the local population and one of their tools was to revoke citizenship and deport many indigenous Shia families to neighboring countries. At one point leaders of the uprising in the 50s were even sent to St. Helena Island where Napoleon was held. Bahrain has one of the oldest civil rights movements in the region, stemming back to the 1920s. There are uprisings almost every ten years in the country. In the 1920s the British were regarded as the de-facto rulers of Bahrain (see: the diaries of Charles Belgrave) to the extent that they could replace one emir with another when they wanted to secure their interest (see: replacement of emir in 1923).
3/12 When the families who had been forced out of Bahrain to countries like Iran and Iraq returned to Bahrain after many years, sometimes decades, the regime tried pushing the narrative that these were Iranians coming to Bahrain that the regime was kind enough to allow. This doesn’t negate that there has also been immigration of Iranians to Bahrain.
4/12 The British and US have always been seen as one of the main reasons the Alkhalifas have maintained absolute power in Bahrain; and Bahrain hosts the US fifth fleet as well as a British airbase. People in Bahrain have protested against the presence of these bases for decades, and in the short-lived lifespan of the legislative assembly in 1973, the AlKhalifas disbanded the assembly and imposed a state of emergency for 25 years because the assembly refused to renew the lease of the US base.
5/12 After the uprising in the 1950s, which was led by Shia, Sunni and leftist leaders and put down by the British, a decision was made that they needed to implement the strategy of divide and conquer. The Alkhalifas very intentionally started a campaign of sectarianism in the country, in the hopes of separating the indigenous population along sectarian lines. What followed was the systematic marginalization and discrimination against the Shia majority in the country (see: the Bandargate report).
6/12 There are unwritten laws in Bahrain about areas in which Shias are not allowed to rent or own, entire ministries (especially sensitive institutions like the military and police) where Shias are generally not allowed to work, Shia women married to non-Bahrainis are unable to pass citizenship to their children, and in schools students are forced to write that their Shia sect goes against Islamic teaching (I experienced this myself). And this is just the tip of the iceberg.
7/12 Simultaneously, the regime started politically naturalizing tens of thousands of people from Pakistan, (specifically Baloch), Yemen, Syria (specifically from Deir Ezzor and Raqqa), and Iraq (specifically baathis post the war on Iraq), amongst other places. This was for two purposes: to change the demographics of the country from a Shia (indigenous) majority to a loyal naturalized Sunni majority; and to build a military and police force that was loyal to the regime (regarded as mercenaries by many locals). Those naturalized received citizenship upon arrival, government housing (which the indigenous population tend to wait decades for), and a job in the military or police.
8/12 There’s an ongoing “joke” in Bahrain that you get beaten on the street by a Pakistani, arrested by a Yemeni, interrogated by a Syrian, tortured by a Jordanian, sentenced by an Egyptian, and the only Bahraini in the entire process is the victim.
The Alkhalifas also try to paintbrush the entire opposition with whatever they construe as being the threat-du-jour (threat of the day) for the West; Nasser-socialists, communists, Iranian, terrorists, etc. They believe by doing so, and by attempting to contain the movement within the indigenous Shia areas, they can better “justify” the oppression and crackdown to the West.
9/12 In addition, corruption is insane in Bahrain; with rising poverty and unemployment. The ruling family has brought in hundreds of thousands of migrant workers who are treated badly and denied much of their rights (read: modern day slavery) – including access to citizenship regardless of how long they stay in the country. They’re underpaid and overworked and many live in dire conditions.
10/12 On the other end of that are the “expats” (read: white westerners), who come to Bahrain, are overpaid for positions they’re not always qualified for, and treated better than the local population. They’re usually given high positions even when there are more qualified locals, and when in the exact same position as a local, they usually receive higher pay and more benefits.
11/12 During the uprising in 2011, many western immigrants not only came out in support of the crackdown, but it was mired in racist and colonialist narratives. In the context of the Alkhalifas relationship with the West, it was not surprising to the indigenous population that this was their positionality in response to people wanting basic rights and freedoms.
12/12 So when you see the reaction on the ground today, with over 30 people arrested so far since Saturday for protesting against the US and the Israeli occupation, understand the context. Bahrain is an old civilization, and quite different from the rest of the GCC in its social and political history.
This is just context - I haven't even touched upon the details of what the people of Bahrain have been subjected to in terms of repression (torture, killings, imprisonment, etc) by the Alkhalifas and their western allies..
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موضوع عاجل:
نحن قلقون جدًا بشأن والدي الذي اتصل للتو وقال إنه لن يُسمح له بإجراء مكالمات بعد الآن ، وكان يردد #البحرين حرة #فلسطين حرة، ويسقط عملاء إسرائيل - لقد استمروا في قطع المكالمة وهو يحاول الاتصال مرة أخرى. هذا تسجيل لإحدى المكالمات التي تم قطعها
بالأمس خلال مكالمته ، قام بتسمية الأشخاص الذين شاركوا في أو كانوا مسؤولين عن تعذيبه ، ونحن قلقون بشأن الانتقام منه - أكثر مما يفعلونه بالفعل كما سأذكر في التغريدات التالية
بسبب هتافات والدي في فبراير حول #فلسطين ، فقد أوقفوا كل علاج أضرار #التعذيب الذي تعرض له ، بالإضافة إلى منعه من المواعيد الطبية - بعضها كان عاجلاً لأنه قد يصاب بالعمى في عينه اليمنى بسبب الجلوكوما ، وهي حالة تقدمية ولا رجعة فيها #البحرين
Urgent thread:
We’re very worried about my father who called this morning and said he won’t be allowed to make anymore calls, and was chanting Free #Bahrain, Free #Palestine, and down with israels collaborators - they kept cutting the call and he kept trying to call back.
Yesterday during his call he named people who took part in and/or were responsible for his torture, and we’re worried about the retaliation against him - more so than what they’re already doing as I’ll mention in the following tweets
Due to my father’s chants in Feb about #Palestine, all treatment for the damage done by #torture he endured has stopped, as well as all access to medical appointments - some were urgent as he may be going blind in his right eye due to glaucoma, which is progressive & irreversible
There's a developing big story that will also bring in the relationship between the #UK and #Bahrain; whether the former is willing to extradite to an oppressive torturing regime - tricky for the UK cuz also involves the monarch's son..
Let's start with the background: a thread
Dr. Sharifa Swar is a psychotherapist who a couple of years ago went public to expose the spread of the use of the Lyrica drug in a middle school in #Bahrain. She talked about how there were high officials involved and called for an investigation
This was also tied into sex trafficking. She exposed this based on conversations she was having with young girls, who were threatened by those selling the drug in the schools. She was summoned and she asked that the minister of interior be present so she can show him the evidence
Thread, thoughts on human rights advocacy:
It’s interesting to me that when human rights violations occur - people are always like “well we need to shed light on it!”.. and in so many cases it gets documented, talked about, shared; and yet not much changes
Part of the reason is that the same governments setting up the institutions and supposed #accountability measures are also some of the governments that must be held accountable..
Then beyond that, they also decided what form of activism is acceptable vs not
Basically as an example - #Bahrain’s regime is very much supported and protected by the West, especially #US and #UK. Then, we the activists, are told we either work within the “approved (by the West)” systems of advocacy - or we’d be considered extremist or violent etc..
Despite the fact that the #BICI report documented that people were killed under #torture in #Bahrain, the culture of #impunity continues, also because the international community did not hold the regime to account #FreeBahrainiPrisoners
"At approximately 10:30 on 3 April, Mr Hasan Jassim Mohamed Maki was pronounced dead. @MSF and @Amnesty examined the body and confirmed to the family that the deceased had been attacked with sharp objects.” #FreeBahrainiPrisoners
@MSF@amnesty "A witness who had been detained with the deceased in the same cell overheard him being told by prison personnel that since he had sickle cell anaemia, they would shower him and turn on the air conditioning in his cell and that he would not be allowed any medical treatment."