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Bahrain: Female Detainees Declare Strike After Prison Authorities Impose New Barrier During Family Visits

2017-10-05 - 4:52 am

Bahrain Mirror: Female detainees in Bahrain have today declared they will go on an open strike after the authorities built an extra barrier to prevent imprisoned women embracing family members on visits.

Women held at Isa Town Detention Centre said they will take no further visits until the prison authorities remove a new glass barrier erected over the table where they meet their families.

The Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD) today spoke to seven family members of the female detainees. The families told BIRD that the prison authorities' restrictions on family contact has been inconsistent. They said detainees meet their family at a large marble table, over which they could shake their hands and kiss them, though with difficulty, during past visits. Such embraces did not result in punishment until the penalties imposed on Ebtisam last week.

A female detainee told BIRD the prison officials had indicated that this clampdown on relations between families and detainees was due to an attempt last week by prominent human rights campaigner Ebtisam Al-Saegh's attempt to hug and kiss her children during a prison visit. In response, the prison administration - headed by Major Mariam Mahmood Al-Barduli - had banned Ebtisam from seeing her family for two weeks and will not let her make phone calls to them for a week.

The detainees going on strike today include Hajar Mansoor, the mother-in-law of London-based human rights activist Sayed Ahmed Alwadaei, as well as Ebtisam Al-Saegh, Najah Al-Sheikh, Medina Ali, Amira Al-Qashami, Rawan Sanqoor and Zaynab Marhoon. Najah and Ebtisam have both allegedly faced sexual assault at the hands of National Security Agency (NSA).

Arabic Version


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