Source: Human Rights Watch
(Beirut) – The decision to go ahead with the Grand Prix on April 22,
2012, givesBahrain’s rulers the opportunity they are seeking to obscure
the seriousness of the country’s human rights situation, Human Rights
Watch said today. The decision was announced on April 13 by the
Federation Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA) and the Formula One
Teams Association. As part of a major public relations campaign
to clean up Bahrain’s image following the brutal crackdown on
pro-democracy protests in 2011, the Bahraini authorities have been
lobbying to have the Bahrain Grand Prix reinstated in 2012. The event
was cancelled in 2011 because of political unrest. Not only is the event
expected to generate significant income, but it is also being used by
the Bahraini authorities to support their claim that the political and
human rights crisis in the country is over.
“Formula One promoters say their decision to race in Bahrain should not
be derailed by political considerations, but the ruling family will
attempt to portray today's decision as a political statement of support
for its repressive policies,” said Tom Porteous,
deputy program director at Human Rights Watch. “The FIA has played into
the government’s narrative to gloss over Bahrain’s continuing human
rights crisis.”
Anti-government protests have been on the rise in recent weeks, and
cancellation of the F1 event has become a major demand of demonstrators.
Human rights activists in Bahrain have reported frequent incidents in
recent weeks of security forces beating suspected protesters, as well as
injuries and possibly deaths from excessive or improper use of teargas.
Bahrain’s rulers have not fully carried out
the key recommendations of the Bahrain Independent Commission of
Inquiry (BICI), a body of international rights experts who examined the
extensive and serious human rights violations in connection with massive
and largely peaceful pro-democracy protests in February-March 2001. The
government has not conducted any known criminal investigations into the
roles of senior officials alleged to be implicated in torture and
unlawful killings. The authorities have also ignored the recommendation
to quash the military court verdicts against protest leaders whose sole
offenses involved free expression and peaceful assembly. Many of the
convictions were based solely on confessions that the detainees claimed
in court had been coerced.
One of those protest leaders serving a life prison sentence for his
role in leading peaceful protests is Abdulhadi al-Khawaja, now in the
third month of a hunger strike, begun on February 8, demanding freedom
for himself and other unjustly convicted opposition activists.
“Normal today in Bahrain means people like Abdulhadi al-Khawaja are
still in prison more than a year after being arrested, serving long
sentences, and no effort to hold accountable the officials responsible
for last year’s killings and torture,” Porteous said. “The Bahraini
government will spin today's announcement as acceptance of this
normality.”
Bahrain sharply restricts the entry of international rights groups.
Doctors Without Borders/Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), for instance,
announced on April 12 that its expatriate staff had been denied entry to
the country and that the Health Ministry had denied the humanitarian
organization permission to operate any clinics in the country. The
organization says that protesters injured in clashes with security
forces go without needed treatment out of fear that they will be
arrested and mistreated if they go to a government facility.
Human Rights Watch urged the Formula One promoters to apply the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Guidelines for
Multinational Enterprises, issued in 2011. Among other things, the
guidelines urge enterprises to avoid contributing to adverse human
rights impacts, and when they do, address these, and at all times to
carry out appropriate human rights due diligence of their work.
“There is a human rights crisis in Bahrain and its rulers should be
pressed to take immediate steps to end it including releasing political
prisoners like al-Khawaja, allowing in groups like MSF, and fully
carrying out the independent commission’s recommendations,” Porteous
said. “The FIA, having given a green light for the Grand Prix to be
exploited for human rights harm, needs to take all the steps it can to
redress the damage it has caused and make sure the Bahraini authorities
implement the measures that are needed.”