Horrifying evidence sheds light on brutality of state crackdown on medical staff. Jeremy Laurance reports
Harrowing testimony of torture, intimidation and  humiliation from a doctor arrested in the crackdown on medical staff in  Bahrain has revealed the lengths to which the regime's security forces  are prepared to go to quash pro-democracy protests. 
Interviews obtained by The Independent from  inside Bahrain tell of ransacked hospitals and of terrified medical  staff beaten, interrogated and forced into signing false confessions.  Many have been detained, their fate unknown. 
Inspired  by the pro-democracy protests which swept Tunisia and Egypt earlier  this year, Bahrainis took to the streets in their thousands in February,  demanding greater political rights and more equality for the Shia  Muslim majority, ruled over for decades by a Sunni monarchy. 
The state launched a fierce counter-offensive in  mid-March, swiftly and brutally crushing the uprising with the backing  of Saudi security forces. 
The campaign of  intimidation against the doctors and nurses who bore witness to the  bloody crackdown began two months ago at Salmaniya Medical Complex, the  main hospital in the capital Manama. It has since been extended to at  least nine health centres which have been systematically attacked by the  security forces over the past month, an activist cataloguing the abuses  says.
Each incident follows the same pattern:  police jeeps surround the centre, before armed men and women in masks  close the gates and line all those caught inside up against the wall. 
Police  dogs are also used to spread fear among the staff. Though it is  impossible to corroborate the accounts, they correspond with others  emerging from Bahrain and from reports by international monitoring  groups.
The latest crackdown followed protests  by doctors at the refusal by the regime to allow ambulances from  Salmaniya Hospital to attend to those injured in the protests. 
Details  of the assaults, collected by the families of those detained and passed  to The Independent, show that at least 40 medical staff were arrested  in nine health centres between 10 April and 27 April. Dr Ahmed Jamal,  president of the Bahrain Medical Society, was arrested at his clinic on 2  May. 
Among 11 female doctors and nurses  arrested, eight were released on 4 May but three remain detained,  including Rula Jasim al-Saffar, 49, president of the Bahrain Nursing  Society who has been held in custody for five weeks. 
One  consultant and family physician described in an email how she had been  beaten, abused and humiliated and left with a black eye and bruises on  her back during a seven-hour detention at the Central Province Police  centre. Fearing for the safety of her children, she asked to remain  anonymous.
She was sworn at, called a "dirty  Shia" and a "whore", beaten with a thick hose and forced to sing the  national anthem, she said. 
At one point she was blindfolded and made to run down a corridor until she banged into a wall. 
Her  assailants alleged she had protested against the regime, and hit her  when she denied it. She was released after signing a document admitting  she had protested against the Health Minister. 
The  doctor believes she was targeted because she is the wife of a prominent  surgeon who has been held in custody since being arrested in  mid-operation more than a month ago "While I thank God I have been  reunited with my children, I am even more fearful for the well-being of  my husband, knowing the torture that I endured," she wrote.
She  said that another female doctor detained with her had been unable to  sing the national anthem when ordered to do so because her throat was  too dry.   
"The interrogators gave her a tiny  sip of water and told her to stick out her tongue. She was blindfolded  and when she put her tongue out, one of the officers suddenly stabbed it  with a pen. Then they told her to sit on a chair because she felt  dizzy. 
"When she went to sit, they pulled the  chair away and she fell to the ground. Then they threw the chair at her  and it landed on top of head. They told her not to remove the chair from  her head."
Relatives of those detained said  some were forced to confess to acts they had not committed, with those  confessions filmed by the security forces for subsequent broadcast. 
The  daughter of one doctor said: "They were made to confess that they gave  treatment only to Shia protesters and not to Sunnis, stole blood from  the hospital to splatter on protesters to make the situation seem more  dramatic, and that they encouraged others to protest against the  regime."
Rights activists say medical officials  have been targeted because they bore witness to the terrible injuries  sustained by the protesters they treated, and could therefore give  evidence against the government. 
Forty-seven  doctors and nurses were charged last week with "promoting efforts to  bring down the government" and "harming the public by spreading false  news". Their trials are expected to begin shortly.
Vivienne  Nathanson, head of ethics at the British Medical Association, said the  attacks on medical staff in Bahrain were unprecedented. 
"I  don't think we have seen it on this scale before. It is very worrying  because doctors and health workers have an ethical duty to treat people  regardless of what they have been doing and the state has an obligation  to protect them. All the doctors have been doing is saying these people  need care and they have got to give care. They are not saying the  protesters are right," she said.
"The UK  Government should be doing everything it can to bring pressure on any  government, whether Bahraini or not, to ensure healthcare can be  provided in safety."
Lord Eric Avebury, a  Liberal Democrat peer and expert on Bahrain, condemned the British  Government's response to the crisis, and called for sanctions against  the Sunni government and the ruling family of King Hamad bin Isa  al-Khalifa. 
"The Foreign Secretary has made  some pretty anodyne statements that are not commensurate with the scale  of the problem. The whole medical and nursing profession, journalists  and all Shia professionals including MPs have been targeted," he said.  
"I  would like to see a ban on entry to the UK of some of the leading  perpetrators of the Khalifa family and the sequestration of their  assets. 
"These are crimes against humanity  which I hope will be subject to criminal proceedings and their assets  used to compensate the victims, subject to court proceedings."
source-The Indipendent 

 
 
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