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Bahraini
Regime Stages Confessions, Rejects Compromise
Joe Stork
At the end of May, the
government of Bahrain summoned the international press to Manama
for what it promised would be a major policy statement on Monday,
June 3. I was in Bahrain at the time, conducting interviews for
a report on human rights conditions there. Bahraini opponents of
the regime in exile abroad, and critics inside the country with
whom I spoke were predicting that the Amir, Shaikh Isa Al Khalifa,
would announce an expansion of the four-year-old hand-picked Consultative
Council, or Shura Council, from 30 to 40 men, perhaps even allowing
some civic or religious groups a role in nominating candidates.
On May 31, three opposition groups--the Bahrain Freedom Movement,
the Popular Front and the National Liberation Front--issued a joint
statement "reject[ing] outright" any such cosmetic concessions.
"We will continue to press ahead with our call for the restoration
of constitutional law to Bahrain," their communique concluded.
For the last several
years, public petitions and mass demonstrations have been alternately
requesting and demanding that the ruling Al Khalifa family restore
National Assembly that it had closed by decree in 1975, and hold
new elections. The government has responded by cracking down hard
on all demonstrations, by indiscriminate arrests and arbitrary detention
of several thousand persons, by abuse and torture of prisoners,
by deporting alleged ringleaders, and by tightening restrictions
on all forms of meetings and public expression. Just before I arrived,
the authorities had detained several Bahraini residents whom they
held responsible for arranging meetings and interpreting for a BBC
television reporter.
This June 3 press conference,
as it turned out, had nothing to do with concessions. Journalists,
instead, heard claims that Bahrain's British-led security forces
had extracted confessions from dozens of detained persons to the
effect that they belonged to a heretofore unknown organization,
Hizb Allah Bahrain-Military Wing. The Minister of Interior claimed
to have in hand the cadres in charge of the security intelligence
and financial committees of the group, who had conveniently confessed
"that they had established this terrorist grouping on the instructions
of the [Iranian] Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and with its
financing." The next day, several of the accused were made to read
parts of their confessions on Bahraini television. The past two
years of political unrest and agitation on behalf of the abrogated
constitution was again dismissed as part of a "scheme of sabotage
and terrorism."
The press conference
and televised confessions produced the desired reporting in the
Western press linking "Iran," "Hizb Allah" and "Bahrain." None of
those accounts mentioned that these confessions had been extracted
over a period of weeks during which the accused had no access to
lawyers. Nor did they refer to Amnesty International's September
1995 report documenting the systematic use of beatings and other
forms of torture in the security service's interrogation of political
detainees, a pattern confirmed by lawyers and former detainees I
spoke with.
The government's charge
that something called "Hizb Allah Bahrain" was behind the unrest
is not new, although no Bahraini group uses this name. This, of
course, does not prove that such an organization does not exist.
Strangely, though, for such a well-armed and well-financed Iranian
surrogate with more than three years of training in Qom and Lebanon's
Beka'a Valley, Bahrain has not witnessed a single attack involving
a weapon even as rudimentary as a pistol, and those explosions and
arsons that have occurred, for the most part, have been noticeably
crude and unsophisticated.
Inside Bahrain, the
government used the confessions in a manner befitting the absolutist
style of rule to which it has become accustomed. The country's two
newspapers, Al-Ayyam and Akhbar al-Khalij, carried
pages of congratulatory "reporting" of the Interior Ministry's unceasing
vigilance. The same message appeared in advertisements by private
companies and sports clubs.
On the day following
the announcement of the confessions, upper-level civil servants
and officials, heads of civic organizations, and religious leaders
were "invited" to the palace to "discuss" the latest developments
with the Amir and the Prime Minister (by all accounts the real power
in the country). To not appear, Bahrainis told me, could well mean
the loss of one's job for a government employee and little likelihood
of finding another. For a Shi'i cleric, a no-show would likely produce
a rude wee-hours summons to Interior Ministry headquarters on the
grounds of the old prison fort in central Manama. Last year, Shaikh
Isa bin Rashid, the head of the General Organization for Youth and
Sports, asked each club to sign a pledge of loyalty to the Amir,
and to send a representative to the Amiri court to present it. "Even
the sports clubs in Diraz and Sanabis," one leading professional
said, referring to Shi'i villages that have been prominent in the
unrest, "just to humiliate them." The Aruba Club, a literary-social
club frequented by liberal businessmen and professionals, initially
resisted the summons, but the Minister of Information called in
the club president, a respected and prominent businessman, and put
heavy pressure on the group to sign. "So we did. Later Shaikh Isa
told someone, 'You see, they came like dogs.'"
Bahrain, today the
administrative headquarters of the US Fifth Fleet, is the main island
of a small archipelago in the Persian Gulf, some 25 kilometers by
causeway from the oil-rich Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia. Bahrain's
original population, the Baharnah, are Arab Shi'a Muslims. The Al
Khalifa conquest in 1783--part of a general movement of tribes out
of the Najd region of Arabia that also brought the Al Sabah to Kuwait--ended
nearly two hundred years of Persian rule and imposed a Sunni Arab
tribal superstructure that dominates the country's political system
yet today.
With the shift of the
British regional imperial apparatus from Bombay and Bushire to Bahrain
after the 1920s, and later the development of the oil and service
industries, expatriate labor from the Indian subcontinent and the
Arab countries (as well as from Britain and later the US at the
upper levels) became an entrenched part of the island's population
profile, even before the tremendous demands for foreign labor with
the increase of oil revenues in the 1970s and early 1980s. Bahrain's
significant merchant, service and industrial sectors also led to
the emergence of a fairly differentiated class structure, further
complicating the social and political dynamics of the country.
Today the population
numbers some 550,000; expatriate workers make up one-third of this
total, but comprise two-thirds of the labor force. At least two-thirds
of native Bahrainis are Shi'a. They are represented in the country's
commercial elite and in certain government departments, but the
top ranks of the government, the security services and the armed
forces are exclusively controlled by the Al Khalifa and families
close to them, all Sunni.
The protracted political
crisis in Bahrain is not, contrary to the usual characterizations,
a conflict of Sunni versus Shi'a. Many Bahrainis I met insist that
their primary identity is that of Bahraini citizen. "I hate being
tagged as a Sunni," one lawyer told me, explaining why he makes
a point of taking the cases of Shi'i political detainees. A Shi'i
colleague used similar words to explain his reluctance to be part
of "Shi'i delegations" summoned to meet with the Prime Minister.
Nevertheless, the crisis
is taking on a confessional coloration, for a number of related
reasons. One is the extent to which economic and class divisions
in Bahraini society reinforce sectarian divides. Unemployment and
poverty are concentrated among the Shi'a. A second is the jolt which
the 1978-79 Iranian revolution gave to a self-consciously Shi'i
political activism throughout the region, not least in Bahrain.
Third, by the end of the 1970s, the regime had fairly decisively
smashed the secular opposition forces--the Popular Front (tied to
the Arab Nationalist Movement) and the National Liberation Front
(the organization of Bahraini Communists). Activists were imprisoned
and then sent into exile, where most of them remain today. This
left the field of oppositionist politics open to forces with a distinctively
Shi'a cast--the Islamic Front for the Liberation of Bahrain, initially
inspired by Khomeinist Iran, and the village-based traditional leadership
of clerics such as Shaikh 'Abd al-Amir al-Jamri, which evolved into
the Bahrain Freedom Movement. The regime took advantage of developments
in Iran to advance its own absolutist agenda. The revolution and
its aftermath "gave the government reasons to follow its illiberal
instincts," one Bahraini defense lawyer told me.
The most relevant political
divide remains that between the ruling family and its many allies,
on the one hand, and the growing number of Bahrainis calling for
restoration of the 1973 Constitution and the "contract" that it
represented between the traditional rulers and expanding modern
political and social forces. Most Bahrainis want to see a continued
major role for the Al Khalifa, but a negotiated one. Underlying
the widespread demand to restore the constitution and the partially
elected parliament is the issue of control of resources, and access
to national income. For impoverished Shi'a, this demand includes
employment: of the 77,000 Bahrainis in the workforce, more than
60,000 are on the state payroll, but hiring has become increasingly
discriminatory. For merchants and businessmen, corruption is a major
issue: they want to see accountability and transparency in the state
budget_an allocated annual sum for the expenses of the ruling family,
for instance, and checks on the multi-sector business investments
of the Prime Minister and his sons. "You can't be both prime minister
and the country's premier businessman without there being a fantastic
conflict of interest," a bank official told me. "The others complain
about how he leaves nothing for anybody else."
In the aftermath of
the Gulf War and the collapse of the Soviet Union, and encouraged
by electoral and parliamentary developments in Kuwait, Bahraini
liberals sensed an opportunity to raise again the issue of elections
and their own parliament. Following informal discussions, a group
consisting mainly of professionals and businessmen drew up a petition
that was then signed by more than 300 prominent individuals. "We
called for elections to a restored parliament, release of political
prisoners, and permission for exiles to return," one petition leader
told me. "It was extremely polite, and included our fulsome respect
for the Al Khalifa... We had known of the [Amir's plan for a Shura
Council] and were trying to pre-empt it...it could not be a substitute
for the elected National Assembly." The Amir promised to study the
petition and reply to its organizers, but never did.
A version of this petition--one
modification was a clause demanding political rights for women--was
initiated publicly in late September 1994 and quickly gathered about
25,000 signatures. That July had seen several large demonstrations
demanding jobs at the Ministry of Labor, which the government disrupted
with tear gas and arrests of alleged ringleaders. "We were not involved
in those demonstrations at all," one petition organizer told me,
"but they certainly added to the atmosphere of ripeness that we
felt."
With the first petition,
the organizers made a point of gathering a more or less equal number
of Sunni and Shi'i signatories, but the public petition was another
story. "That's why some of us argued against a popular petition,"
one signer of the first, himself a Shi'a, told me. "The [Shi'i]
shaikhs have the signers. They will overwhelm you. And that's exactly
what happened." Although the demands were essentially the same,
the public petition campaign frightened many Sunnis. The government
was quick to exploit this Sunni hesitation by consistently refusing
to meet with joint Sunni-Shi'i delegations. The thousands of recent
arrests and detentions have almost exclusively involved Shi'i opponents
and critics.
One of the organizers
of the July demonstrations at the Labor Ministry, a young shaikh
named 'Ali Salman, also campaigned for the popular petition. He
was arrested several times that summer and fall, the last time on
December 5. "I played a role in this because my sermons were very
popular," he told me. After several weeks in prison, Shaikh 'Ali
was being interrogated by a leading official in the security services,
Col. 'Adil Flaifil. "'If you withdraw the petition,' he said, 'this
will all be finished.' I refused." Shaikh 'Ali was forcibly expelled
from Bahrain with two other young Shi'i leaders in early January,
and now resides in London.
The government's decision
to expel Shaikh 'Ali and the others--a tactic learned from the British
textbook of colonial rule--was one key escalation of the crisis.
His arrest had been a major cause of the demonstrations of December
1994, and his expulsion sent a clear signal that there would be
no compromise or dialogue around the demands raised in the petition.
A second escalation came in late 1995, when the government publicly
reneged on an informal understanding it had reached with Shaikh
al-Jamri and other Shi'i community leaders then in detention. This
led to the revival of demonstrations and attacks against public
property in late December and early January 1996, and the re-arrest
of al-Jamri and many others.
The staged confessions
of early June represent the ruling family's latest signal that they
will not concede on demands for constitutional limits to their power.
The regime enjoys unstinting public support from other kings and
autocrats. "We are against any other parliament in the Gulf," Prince
Nayif, the Saudi Interior Minister, reportedly said recently to
a group of Saudi Shi'a who urged Saudi mediation of the conflict.
Just as predictable
have been the unrestrained endorsements by Britain and the United
States. A week prior to the public confessions, General John Shalikashvili,
chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, visited Manama. "We support
Bahrain's efforts to ensure its stability, and we continue to accuse
Iran as a threat to the stability of the region," he told an informal
press conference. Following the confessions spectacle, Bahraini
authorities released a statement from President Bill Clinton to
the Amir which said that "the United States fully supports Your
[sic] government and the sovereignty and safety of Bahrain's territories."
The regime can, in
the short term, probably preserve its unfettered rule. And Washington
can, in the short term, enlist regional support in the campaign
to isolate Iran. The majority of Bahrainis are paying a heavy price
for these dubious accomplishments, though, and the opportunities
for a resolution that would preserve Bahrain's legacy of social
tolerance and liberality are fast vanishing.
Joe
Stork, former editor of this magazine, is advocacy director at
Human Rights Watch/Middle East, based in Washington, DC. This article
first appeared in Le Monde Diplomatique, July 1996.

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