By Dylan Takores
Impunity Watch Reporter, Middle East

MANAMA, Bahrain – Police fired tear gas at activists at the Jabriya school for boys in Manama on Tuesday following a protest for the release of a detained student.

Activists flee from police tear gas. (Photo Courtesy of Bahrain Center for Human Rights)

Police arrested Hassan Humidan, 17, on Monday as part of a government crackdown on protests and general unrest in anticipation of the upcoming F1 Grand Prix race scheduled to take place next week.  Humidan is one of approximately 100 people that have been arrested in the past month as a result of increased law enforcement and boosted security.

The government claimed the police acted within the bounds of the law.  The Ministry of the Interior tweeted that “police dealt with a group of thugs outside Jabriya school according to legal regulations.”

Many observers tweeted pictures of protestors fleeing from the tear gas.  According to the Associated Press, Mohamed Jaber, a father of one of the Jabriya school’s students, attempted to pick up his son from the school, but was denied entrance by police.

The protests are a reaction to the Bahraini government’s human rights violations.  Activists call for the cancelation of the Grand Prix race.  The confrontation is the most recent in a span of clashes that began in February 2011.

The race was planned to exhibit to the world that the social unrest in Bahrain decreased and the nation is stabilizing.  Andy Slaughter, Chairman of the All-Party Parliamentary Group Democracy in Bahrain, reported to the BBC that “There is a close relationship between the race and the repression by a regime that is using F1 to try and establish normalcy.”  Slaughter referred to the race as a “propaganda exercise.”

Clashes between the government and human rights activists occur in Bahrain on a near-daily basis.  Human rights groups approximate that fifty individuals have died since confrontations began two years ago.  The government disputes this number.

Despite the violence, the Bahraini government refuses to cancel the race.  Nicholas McGeehan of Human Rights Watch criticized the government’s decision to go ahead with the race, condemning it as a “political event which will gloss over serious rights violations.”

Both the Bahraini government and Formula One President and CEO Bernie Ecclestone contended that the race is crucial to the country’s fragile economy.  The government vowed to maintain strict security over the event.

 

For further information, please see:

Albawaba – Police ‘fire tear gas’ at boys’ school following student’s arrest – 16 April 2013

BBC – Bahrain: Police ‘fire tear gas’ at boys’ school – 16 April 2013

Philly.com – Bahrain GP on despite anti-government protests – 16 April 2013

Washington Post – Bahrain police raid high school, fire tear gas in clash with students following arrest – 16 April 2013

Author: Impunity Watch Archive