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Related: About this forumDemocracy Now 2013 Interview with Maryam Alkhawaja, Now a Prisoner in Bharain
Last edited Mon Sep 1, 2014, 02:23 PM - Edit history (1)
Prominent human rights defender Maryam Alkhawaja was arrested on August 30, 2014 after returning to Bahrain to visit her ailing father who is serving a life sentence in prison. She was seized on arrival at Bahrain's international airport on Saturday, August 30 2014 and charged with insulting the king on social media. (For updates to the story visit http://www.bahrainrights.org .)
Maryam's arrest shines a spotlight on the continued unrest in Bahrain including the government's actions against those campaigning for respect of basic freedoms.
Democracy Now Interview
Amy Goodman interviews Maryam Al Khawaja
May 10, 2013
With Father and Sister Imprisoned, Exiled Bahraini Activist Maryam Alkhawaja Condemns Ongoing Abuses
The Bahraini government continues its crackdown on opposition protesters, with demonstrations repressed and scores of dissidents held behind bars. We're joined by Maryam Alkhawaja, a leading Bahraini human rights activist. Her family has been highly critical of the U.S.-backed monarchy and they have paid a heavy price. Maryam's father, human rights attorney Abdulhadi Alkhawaja, is serving a life sentence in prison. He has already spent two years in jail. Her sister, Zainab Alkhawaja, is also imprisoned. A close friend of the family, Nabeel Rajab, is also in jail. Rajab had been the head of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights. "There has hardly been any real accountability of the Bahraini government of the human rights violations that have been going on in Bahrain for more than two years now," says Alkhawaja, who is now the acting president of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights.
veness
(413 posts)The Washington Post's Freedom House presented the 2012 Freedom House Award to the Al-Khawaja family for their commitment to human rights and democracy in Bahrain.
Video: Maryam Al-Khawaja Accepts the Freedom Award for the Al-Khawaja family at the Freedom House Annual Awards Dinner 2012.
Jack Rabbit
(45,984 posts)Let's see if I can ring his bell . . .
First, we'll simply state an empirical fact: The Sultan of Bahrain is a human rights violator.
Based on that, we'll go an unflattering judgment: The Sultan of Bahrain is a tyrant.
We can be more threatening: The people of Bahrain should demonstrate their appreciation of the Sultan and his leadership by throwing a necktie party in his honor under a lamp post.
If all else fails, we just gel personal: The Sultan of Bahrain is ugly.
For those want to make an independent appraisal of that last one:
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[/center][font size="1"]From Wikimedia Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hamad-Bin-Isa-Al-Khalifa.jpg
(Public Domain)
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littlemissmartypants
(22,656 posts)He needs a new stylist and she deserves our support.
I am wondering if we will hear from her again and deeply respect how she has risked her life and liberty for such a just cause.
Now having been provided with this likeness, it's time to get to work on the voodoo doll.