Euro-Med Monitor: Bahraini authorities must not detain activists on background of social media activity
Geneva - The measures to be taken by the Bahraini authorities against social media users by imposing strict control over
their accounts are deeply alarming, warns the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights.
The Bahraini Interior Ministry said in a statement that it was taking “firm measures to deal with the chaos caused by
some social media accounts” - without referring to any specific account or page - stating that they are “spreading
malicious rumors aimed at destroying the social fabric and civil peace.”
Bahrain has grown into a country with a high record of violations of the right to freedom of opinion and expression by
chasing activists and opponents on various charges, most notably for “spreading false news,” Euro-Med Monitor said in a
press release Yesterday.
Social media sites in Bahrain, especially Twitter, are a major platform for human rights activists, as well as opponents
and critics of the ruling regime's relentless and repressive policies, added the Geneva-based human rights organization.
In the past years, the Bahraini authorities have carried out large-scale arrests of journalists and activists. The most
prominent of whom was Nabeel Rajab, who was sentenced on 21 February to a five-year imprisonment for a tweet he made on
his personal account for opposing the war on Yemen, and also criticizing the judicial procedures in Bahrain.
Rajab was charged of spreading false news and insulting a foreign country - in reference to Saudi Arabia - for waging
war on Yemen.
The Bahraini authorities have also punished opposition activists living abroad by arresting members of their families
inside the country. In May last year, Bahraini authorities arrested the father and sister of the political activist in
Germany, Youssef al-Huri. He called for a “peaceful sit-in on his twitter account to protest his country's repressive
practices against activists and opponents.” The Bahraini authorities asked Yusuf's father during his detention at the
police center to contact his son Yusuf and inform him not to engage in any opposition activity.
Referring to the report issued in mid-November by Freedom House on “Freedom on the Net 2017” for countries around the
world, which classified the State of Bahrain as "Not Free" for several reasons. Some include restrictions on the
Internet, blocking communication applications in the country, and banning websites of religious and political
associations.
The Bahraini authorities arrested dozens of activists in the period between June 2016 and May 2017. These activists were
sentenced to prison terms totaling 148 months because of their use of social media, according to Freedom House.
The Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor calls on the Bahraini authorities to respect the conventions and treaties
ratified by the Government of Bahrain, in particular the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Article
19, which states that, “Everyone shall have the right to freedom of expression; this right shall include freedom to
seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds, regardless of frontiers..” Article 19 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights uses a similar wording providing for the right to expression.
Euro-Med Monitor further calls on the United Nations bodies to bear their responsibilities by pressing the Bahraini
authorities to end their violations of human rights and public freedoms in Bahrain. The nonprofit organization also has
urged the Bahraini authorities to respect their international obligations by allowing journalists and activists to
perform their duties without interference