Bahrain executes three activists despite calls to halt death sentences

Young journalists club

News ID: 42449
Asia » Asia
Publish Date: 15:26 - 27 July 2019
TEHRAN, Jul 27 -Bahrain has executed three pro-democracy activists on two separate cases, defying widespread calls to commute the death sentences handed to the prisoners in an "unfair" mass trial.

Bahrain executes three activists despite calls to halt death sentencesTEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) -Ahmad al-Malali, 24, and Ali Hakim al-Arab, 25, were executed at Jaw prison, south of the Bahraini capital Manama, on Friday after private meetings with their families.

Al-Malali and al-Arab were sentenced to death last year in a mass trial along with another 56 men who were convicted and given jail terms on "terrorism crimes".

The Public prosecutor's office announced the men were put to death on charges of possessing firearms and killing a police officer. The opposition al-Wefaq society condemned the executions as extrajudicial.

The regime in the tiny Persian Gulf kingdom carried out the death penalties despite fierce protests by the United Nations and several human rights groups and

The Bahrain Centre for Human Rights said that the families of the two had received phone calls from Jaw prison for private visits - a procedure that usually precedes execution.

Reports had also been emerged of an increased security presence around the jail.

Bahraini law requires death row inmates to receive a family visit on the same day that they are killed.

Mullali and Arab were arrested separately in February 2017.

They were convicted of "terrorism offenses" and sentenced them to death in January 2018 during a mass trial marred by allegations of torture and serious due process violations.

The Bahraini Court of Cassation upheld the death penalties against the two men in May 2019.

Reports said that King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifah ratified the verdict.

A London-based Bahraini activist rights group, the Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD), said “the executions mark one of Bahrain’s darkest days”.

"It appears that the Bahraini regime planned this meticulously, timing the executions to coincide with US, EU and UK legislative recesses in order to avoid international scrutiny," BIRD’s Director Sayed Ahmed Alwadaei said in a statement.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) had called on the Bahraini king to immediately revoke the executions and spare the two young men from "such a cruel death.”

“If the executions are indeed imminent, then the king has committed a grave injustice by ratifying the death sentences of the two men despite the allegations of torture and other serious due process concerns,” said Lama Fakih, acting Middle East director at HRW. “He should right the wrong by immediately revoking the death sentences.”

Additionally, Amnesty International said that al-Malali and al-Arab had been tortured in custody through electric shocks and beatings.

Source:presstv

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