Bahrain
Bahrain
Bahrain
42.
The Kingdom of Bahrain is an archipelago consisting of 33 islands,
five of which are inhabited. The largest of these islands are Bahrain,
Muharraq, Umm an Nasan and Sitra. Bahrain is one of the most densely
populated countries in the world, with a total landmass of 760 square
kilometres. To the southeast of Bahrain is the State of Qatar, and to its west
lies the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, with which it is connected by a 25
kilometre causeway. To the north and east of Bahrain lies the Islamic
Republic of Iran.
43.
The territory of Bahrain is divided for administrative purposes into
five governorates: Asimah (which includes the capital, Manama); Janubiyah;
Muharraq; Shamaliyah; and Al Wusta. As of 2010, 42% of the population
lives in the two largest cities, Manama and Muharraq. According to the 2010
census, the total number of persons residing in Bahrain is 1,234,571. Of
these, 568,399 are Bahraini citizens (46%) and 666,172 are expatriates
(54%).19 Of the total population of Bahrain, 70% are Muslim, while the
remaining 30% are Christian, Hindu, Sikh, Jewish or followers of other
faiths.20 There are no recent publicly available figures on the exact size of the
Sunni and Shia communities of Bahrain. A census undertaken in 1941 prior
to Bahrains independence placed the percentage of Sunnis at 48% and Shia at
52% of the Muslim population.21 Current unofficial estimates vary between
60-70% Shia and 30-40% Sunni, although these figures, and demographic
data in Bahrain generally, are a contentious issue.
B.
44.
Bahrain was one of the first places to embrace Islam, and remained
under Islamic rule until Portuguese forces occupied it from 1521 to 1602.22
The Safavid Persian Empire displaced the Portuguese and ruled from 1602 to
1783.23 The family that eventually established the modern ruling dynasty of
Bahrain, the Al Khalifa, is a branch of the Bani Utbah, a tribe which settled in
Kuwait in 1716. Some 60 years later, the family left Kuwait for the western
coast of Qatar. There they inhabited the town of Zubarah where they engaged
in commerce in pearls. In 1783 the Al Khalifa family, led by Sheikh Ahmed
19
11
24
The Al Khalifa family did not immediately extend its full and unrivalled control over
Bahrain. Rather, a number of mostly Arab tribes competed with the Al Khalifa family for
influence, including the Omani Matarish tribe and Wahhabi forces from what is now Saudi
Arabia. By 1811, the Al Khalifa family secured full control over Bahrain. See Fuad Khouri,
Tribe and State in Bahrain (University of Chicago Press 1980) pp 22-27. See also Juan Cole,
Sacred Space and Holy War: The Politics, Culture and History of Shiite Islam (I.B.Tauris
2002) Chapter 3.
25
General Treaty between the East India Company and the Friendly Arabs (Oman/Bahrain), 8
January 1820, 70 CTS 463; Preliminary Treaty between the East India Company and Bahrain,
5 February 1820, 70 CTS 481.
26
Convention between Great Britain and Bahrain, 31 May 1861, 124 CTS 163. See generally
J. F. Standish, British Maritime Policy in the Persian Gulf (1967) 3(4) Middle Eastern
Studies; Michelle Burgis, Boundaries of Discourse in the International Court of Justice:
Mapping Arguments in Arab Territorial Disputes (Martinus Nijhoff 2009) p 152.
27
In March 1970, the Secretary-General of the United Nations, pursuant to a request from the
Governments of Iran and the United Kingdom and exercising his good offices, sent a mission
to Bahrain headed by his Personal Representative, Mr Vittorio Winspeare Guicciardi. The
mission sought to ascertain the wishes of the people of Bahrain regarding their status. The
Representative submitted his report, in which he concluded, My consultations have convinced
me that the overwhelming majority of the people of Bahrain wish to gain recognition of their
identity in a fully independent and sovereign State free to decide for itself its relations with
other States. See UN doc S/9772 (30 April 1970) 57. The Security Council unanimously
endorsed the report of the Personal Representative of the Secretary-General and welcomed the
conclusions and the findings of the report. See SC res 278 (1970).
28
The Member States of the Gulf Cooperation Council are: Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar,
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
12
C.
48.
According to the Constitution of 2002, Bahrain is a constitutional
hereditary monarchy. The King is the Head of State, while the Prime Minister
serves as the Head of Government. The Council of Ministers is appointed by
the King and presided over by the Prime Minister, a position that has been
held by HRH Prince Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa since Bahrains
independence.
49.
Legislative authority is vested in a bicameral National Assembly (alMajlis al-Watani). The lower house, the Council of Deputies (Majlis alNowab), consists of 40 elected members, while the upper house, the
Consultative Council (Majlis al-Shura), is comprised of 40 members
appointed by the King.29 Members of both Councils serve four-year terms.
Draft acts of parliament must be approved by the Consultative Council to pass
into law, which means that the appointed chamber of the National Assembly
exercises a de facto veto over the legislative process.30 Draft acts approved by
both houses of the National Assembly pass into law once ratified and
promulgated by the King. The King, within six months of receiving an act
approved by the National Assembly, may return it to the legislature for
reconsideration, in which event it will pass into law only if approved by a twothirds majority of both houses.31
50.
The King enjoys broad executive powers, which he exercises both
directly and through his ministers,32 who are appointed and dismissed by
Royal Decree.33 The King is the Supreme Commander of the Bahrain
Defence Force (BDF)34 and presides over the Higher Judicial Council.35
While the Council of Ministers is collectively accountable to the King,36 the
Council of Deputies may withdraw confidence from any cabinet member by a
two-thirds majority.37 The Constitution stipulates, however, that the Council
of Deputies may not withhold confidence from the Prime Minister.38 Rather,
if the Council of Deputies finds, by a two-thirds majority, that it is unable to
cooperate with the Prime Minister, the matter is referred to the King to
adjudge by either dismissing the Prime Minister or disbanding the lower
house.39 Generally, the King has the right to dissolve the Council of Deputies,
in which case sessions of the Consultative Council are suspended.40
51.
The BDF, which includes the army, navy, air force and medical
services, employs approximately 12,000 persons including civilian and
29
13
D.
53.
Bahrain discovered oil in 1931, the first of the Arab States of the Gulf
region to do so. It is however oil-poor relative to its neighbours. Bahrains
mainland oil reserves are expected to be depleted within the next 15 years.
Current production levels stand at approximately 11,635 barrels per day from
the mainland Awali field and 54,741 barrels per day from the offshore Abu
Safah field which Bahrain shares with Saudi Arabia.43 Nonetheless,
petroleum production and refining continues to be the countrys largest
industry, currently accounting for around 79% of Bahrains exports.44 The
production and export of aluminium is Bahrains second largest industry. The
financial sector, which currently accounts for 26% of growth in gross
domestic product (GDP), is among the central pillars of the economy, and
41
The SDC is presided over by the King, and its membership includes the Heir Apparent, the
Commander-in-Chief of the BDF, and the heads of certain government agencies, such as the
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Minister of Interior, Minister of Defence and Director of the NSA.
See Royal Order No. 2 of 2006. This Order was amended by Royal Order No. 15 or 2008.
42
Decree Law No. 42 of 2002.
43
Central Bank of Bahrain, Economic Indicators, March 2011 No. 31 (2011),
http://www.cbb.gov.bh/assets/E%20I/EI%20Mar2011.pdf p 5, accessed 16 November 2011.
44
Central Bank of Bahrain, Economic Indicators, March 2011 No. 31 (2011)
http://www.cbb.gov.bh/assets/E%20I/EI%20Mar2011.pdf p 5, accessed 16 November 2011.
14
45
15
56.
Reaction to these reforms has varied. Many have welcomed them as
indispensable to enhancing Bahrains competitiveness and attracting foreign
investment, important considerations in light of dwindling oil reserves. Some
however have criticised what they consider excessive privatisation of publicly
owned enterprises, over-reliance on foreign consultancy firms and a
disproportionate focus on the financial and the real estate sectors to the
detriment of other parts of the economy.51
57.
Bahrain has signed a number of trade, investment and economic
agreements. It joined the World Trade Organization in 1995 and signed a
Free Trade Agreement with the United States in 2006.52 It has adopted
bilateral investment treaties with a number of States.53 Bahrain is also party to
the 2001 Economic Agreement between the States of the Cooperation
Council, which aims to advance economic integration and investment and
trade within the GCC.
58.
The latest global financial crisis affected Bahrain, although to a lesser
extent than some of its neighbours. The real estate and financial sectors were
particularly hard hit. Several major construction projects were delayed or
cancelled.54 The two main corporate banks based in Bahrain, Arab Banking
Corporation and Gulf Investment Bank, had to be recapitalised several times
by their owners (in both cases a coalition of Arab governments). Some largescale scandals involving billions of dollars of alleged fraud were reported, and
although some cases have been filed, none at the time of this Report had led to
a conviction.55
59.
According to figures produced by the Bahrain Economic
Development Board, unemployment rates were below 4% at the beginning of
2011, and subsequently rose to around 4% in the following months.56
Although there was job loss during the financial crisis, most notably within
51
Bahrain does not impose income taxes, which some contest may contribute to the widening
gap between the rich and poor in Bahrain. See Coming Massacre of BAPCO () ,
al-Waqt (24 January 2010)(Arabic Text).
52
The Bahrain Situation, 4 (Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies, March 2011). See
United States-Bahrain Free Trade Agreement, 11 January 2006, http://www.ustr.gov/tradeagreements/free-trade-agreements/bahrain-fta/final-text accessed 16 November 2011.
53
For example, with the Peoples Republic of China (17 June 1999); United Kingdom (30
October 1991); Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan (8 February 2000); Kingdom of Thailand (21
May 2002); France (24 February 2004); Federal Republic of Germany (5 February 2007); and
Czech Republic (1 October 2007).
54
Bahrain Economic Development Board, Economic Overview, Annual Economic Review
2010,
http://www.bahrainedb.com/uploadedFiles/Bahraincom/BahrainForBusiness/Annual%20Econ
omic%20Review.pdf p 34, accessed 16 November 2011. See also Elsa Baxter, UAE Real
Estate Hardest Hit in Region by Global Crisis, Arabian Business, 16 September 2009 (In
Bahrain 148 projects are in construction with 54 cancelled or on hold.).
55
Saad Boss Facing Criminal Charges in Bahrain, Reuters (8 March 2011).
56
Bahrain Economic Development Board, Bahrain Economic Quarterly 2011 Second
Quarter
(2011)
http://www.bahrainedb.com/uploadedFiles/Bahraincom/BahrainForBusiness/BEQ%20Q2%20
2011(2).pdf accessed 16 November 2011.
16
According to statistics from the fourth quarter of 2010, the total workforce of Bahrain
numbered 452,348. Of those, 77,641 are Bahraini citizens, and 374,707 are foreign nationals.
See Labor Market Regulating Authority, Bahrain Labor Market Indicators,
http://blmi.lmra.bh/2010/12/data/ems/Table_05.pdf accessed 16 November 2011.
58
Martin Baldwin-Edwards, Labour Immigration, Labour Markets and Demographics in the
GCC Countries: National Patterns and Trends (Kuwait Program on Development,
Governance and Globalization in the Gulf States, London School of Economics, 2011) pp 9,
12.
59
See Emile Nakhleh, Bahrain: Political Development in a Modernizing Society (Lexington
Books 1976); Fred H. Lawson, Bahrain: The Modernization of Autocracy (Westview Press
1989)
60
Laurence Louer, The Political Impact of Labor Migration in Bahrain (2008) 20 City &
Society pp 32, 36.
61
See Andrew M. Gardner, City of Strangers: The Transnational Indian Community in
Manama, Bahrain (unpublished Masters thesis, University of Arizona, 2005)
http://www.openthesis.org/documents/City-Strangers-Transnational-Indian-Community126736.html accessed 16 November 2011.
62
UNDP,
International
Human
Development
Indicators:
Bahrain,
http://hdrstats.undp.org/en/countries/profiles/BHR.html accessed 16 November 2011. The
Human Development Index (HDI) is a broad definition of well-being and provides a
composite measure of three basic dimensions of human development: health, education and
income.
17
63
18
E.
Religious and Sectarian Composition of the
Population
65.
Religious, sectarian and ethnic identities are an important aspect of
life in Bahrain. For many, Bahrain has been a model of ethnic and intersectarian harmony, particularly when compared with neighbouring societies.
Others argue, however, that Bahrain suffers from widespread and
longstanding sect-based discrimination that has disempowered large segments
of the population. As is often the case with questions of social identity, there
are different and often opposing narratives and discourses, which usually arise
from a mixture of historic, political, religious and economic factors. Given
that inter-sectarian discord was among the central features of the disturbances
that occurred in Bahrain during February and March 2011, an outline of the
religious and sectarian composition of Bahraini society is indispensible to
understanding this most recent round of civil unrest.
66.
Some observers and political commentators have depicted Bahraini
society as deeply divided between two monolithic communities, Shia and
68
19
Nancy Elly Khedouri, From Our Beginning to Present Day (Al Manar Press 2007).
For an official breakdown of the religious composition of Bahraini society (including
citizens and expatriates, but not presenting a breakdown on the basis of sect) see GoB 2010
Census, http://www.census2010.gov.bh/results_en.php accessed 16 November 2011.
74
For a general overview of Shia communities in the Arabian Gulf, see Juan Cole & Nikki
Keddie (eds), Shiism and Social Protest (Yale University Press 1986); Gawdat Bahgat, Peace
in the Persian Gulf, The Shiis Dimension (1999) 24 Peace & Change 76; Graham E. Fuller
& Rend R. Francke, The Arab Shia: The Forgotten Muslims (Palgrave Macmillan 2000); Juan
R. I. Cole, Rival Empires of Trade and Imami Shiism in Eastern Arabia 1300-1800 (1987)
19 International Journal of Middle East Studies 177.
75
For a general introduction to Shia history, thought, and jurisprudence, see: Cyril Glass, The
Concise Encyclopaedia of Islam (Stacey International, 1991); Iftekhar Mahmood, Shiism: A
Religious and Political History of the Shii Branch of Islam (Pine House Publishers 2007);
Linda S. Walbridge, The Most Learned of the Shia: The Institution of the Marja Taqlid
(Oxford University Press 2001); Mahmoud Hamdy Zaqzuq, Encyclopaedia of Schools in Islam
(2007)(Arabic Text); Mahmoud Hamdy Zaqzuq, General Islamic
(2001)(Arabic Text); Salah Aboul-So'ud, Shi'a: Political Encyclopaedia (
: Origin and Religious Doctrine Since the Death of the Prophet
(2004)(Arabic Text); Abdel-Azeem Hanafi, Encyclopaedia of Islamic Schools
(1993) (Arabic Text) and Groups
76
On Wilayat al-Faqih see Rainer Brunner & Werner Ende (eds), The Twelver Shia in
Modern Times: Religious Culture & Political Culture (Brill Publishing 2000); Mohamed
Salim el-Awwa, Political Regimes in Islamic States (
()1983)(Arabic Text); Mohamed Abdel-Monem, Vilayat-e Faqih: Between Theory and
Application (1991)(Arabic Text).
73
20
77
Despite the fact that there are no resident Marja al-taqlid in Bahrain, there is a number of
highly influential Shiite scholars and thinkers, including: Sheikh Issa Qassim, Sheikh
Mohamed Mahfouz, Sheikh Abdulla Ghurayfi.
78
For an overview of the history and tribal backgrounds of Bahrain see: Abbas el-Murshed,
Bahrain (2011) 3 Arabian Gazetteer: Arabian Peninsula History Series (
)(Arabic Text); Mahmoud Shaker, Persian Gulf History Encyclopaedia
) (2003)(Arabic Text); Mohamed Sulaiman Tayeb, Arabian Tribes )
:) Encyclopaedia: Field and Historical Researches
)(1994)(Arabic Text); Jamal Qasim Zakareya, Modern and Contemporary Persian Gulf
)(1996)(Arabic Text); Mohamed Hassan Aydarus, ) History
) Studies on the Persian Gulf and Arabian Peninsula
(2008)(Arabic Text).
79
On Sunni Islamic jurisprudence and thought, see: C.G. Weeramantry, Islamic
Jurisprudence: An International Perspective (Macmillan 1988); Majid Khaduri, Islamic
Jurisprudence: Shafiis Risala (Johns Hopkins Press 1961); Mohammad Hashim Kamali,
Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence (Islamic Texts Society 2002); Zaki-eddin Shaban,
(1967)(Arabic Text); Mahmoud Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence (
(1990) (Arabic Text), Muhamed Tantawi Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence (
)Grand Imam, Mohamed Sayed Tantawi, Jurisprudence: Simplified Edition
(2000)(Arabic Text); Mohamed Abu-Zahra, Islamic Jurisprudence Encyclopaedia
(1967)(Arabic Text); Mohamed el-Husseini Hanafi Introduction to Islamic )
(1970)(Arabic Text); Mohamed Yousef Mosa, ) Jurisprudence Studies
(1964)(Arabic Text); Grand Imama, Jad-el-) Islamic Jurisprudence History
(2005)(Arabic Text).) Haq Ali Jad-el-Haq, Islamic Jurisprudence Flexibility
21
Kenneth Katzman, Bahrain: Reform, Security, and U.S. Policy (Congressional Research
Service, 2 March 2011) http://fpc.state.gov/documents/organization/158480.pdf pp 6-7,
accessed 16 November 2011.
81
Omar Al-Shehabi, Demography and Bahrains Unrest (Arab Reform Bulletin, 16 March
2011)
http://carnegieendowment.org/2011/03/16/demography-and-bahrain-s-unrest/6b7y
accessed 16 November 2011. In 2003, the Bahrain Center for Human Rights (BCHR)
conducted a study of discrimination in government employment policies that included an
analysis of 32 ministries and educational institutions, and found the following: [O]ut of 572
high-ranking public posts, Shiite citizens hold 101 jobs only, representing 18% of the total.
When the research was conducted, there were 47 individuals with the rank of minister and
undersecretary. Of these, there were ten Shiites, comprising 21% of the total. These do not
include the critical ministries of Interior, Foreign [Affairs], Defence, Security and Justice.
BCHR, Discrimination in Bahrain: The Unwritten Law (2003) p 10.
82
The Real Story of Bahrains Divided Society, The Guardian (3 March 2011)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/mar/03/bahrain-sunnis-shia-divided-society
accessed 16 November 2011.
83
United States Department of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor,
International
Religious
Freedom
Report
2007:
Bahrain
(2007)
http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2007/90208.htm accessed 16 November 2011.
22
84
United States Department of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor,
International
Religious
Freedom
Report
2007:
Bahrain
(2007)
http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2007/90208.htm accessed 16 November 2011.
85
Justice Minister: Regulating Places of Warship Constitutional, Licensing Maintains
Inviolability ( :) , al-Waqt (12 December
2008)(Arabic Text)
86
Supreme Organ for Ministerial Employments, al-Obeidali Stance towards Iran Intervention
(!!) , al-Watan, (27 April 2011)(Arabic
Text). A 2005 report by the International Crisis Group noted that Shia did indeed dominate
certain government ministries, such as the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Industry.
According to the report, over 50% of the senior posts in the latter ministry are staffed by
Shiites. See International Crisis Group, Bahrains Sectarian Challenge (6 May 2005)
http://www.crisisgroup.org/~/media/Files/Middle%20East%20North%20Africa/Iran%20Gulf/
Bahrain/Bahrains%20Sectarian%20Challenge.pdf accessed 16 November 2011.
87
Omar Al-Shehabi, Demography and Bahrains Unrest (Arab Reform Bulletin, 16 March
2011)
http://carnegieendowment.org/2011/03/16/demography-and-bahrain-s-unrest/6b7y
accessed 16 November 2011.
88
Fuad Khouri, Tribe and State in Bahrain (University of Chicago Press 1981) pp 41-49.
89
Fuad Khouri, Tribe and State in Bahrain (University of Chicago Press 1981) pp 199-200.
23
F.
Political Activity
74.
Historically, religiously driven or sect-based movements were not the
sole forms of political activity in Bahrain.91 Indeed, for most of the 20th
century, political opposition derived from secular and nationalist forces that
crossed religious, sectarian and ethnic lines, and opposition leadership
originated in both Sunni and Shia families.92
75.
Movements calling for greater popular political representation in
Bahrain can be traced to 1938, when a group of activists from both the Shia
and Sunni communities presented the local rulers and the British governor
with demands for a wider margin of local autonomy and self-rule, including
the formation of an elected legislative council and a labour union, and called
for restrictions on the admission of expatriates to the country. The movement
was not successful and its leaders were either imprisoned or exiled.93
Thereafter, Bahrain witnessed a succession of organised political movements
and episodes of political unrest. The most significant organised political
movement of this period was the Higher Executive Council (HEC), which was
established in 1954 and functioned as a central forum for political
coordination among the active Bahraini political forces. HEC was composed
of Shia and Sunnis, and sought to mobilise support for an elected national
legislative council, legalisation of labour unions, legislative and regulatory
reform and establishment of a Supreme Court. The HEC was able to obtain
official recognition from the ruling authorities, and subsequently established a
general labour and trade union and contributed to the drafting of Bahrains
first labour code (the Labour Code of 1957). The HEC was disbanded when
90
Abdulhadi Khalaf, The Kings Dilemma: Obstacles to Political Reform in Bahrain (Fourth
Mediterranean Social and Political Research Meeting, March 2003).
91
Abdulhadi Khalaf, Contentious Politics in Bahrain: From Ethnic to National and Vice Versa
(4th Nordic Conference on Middle East Studies, 1998) http://www.smi.uib.no/pao/khalaf.html
accessed 16 November 2011.
92
Fuad Khouri, Tribe and State in Bahrain (University of Chicago Press 1981) pp 199-200.
93
Fuad Khouri, Tribe and State in Bahrain (University of Chicago Press 1981) pp 197-198.
24
25
99
Fuad Khouri, Tribe and State in Bahrain (University of Chicago Press 1981) pp 230-233.
In 1977, the Government of Bahrain claims to have foiled an attempted coup dtat led by a
group of BDF officers who were associated with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Oman
and the Arabian Gulf. See: Ali Rabei'a, Experience Infanticide: Democratic Life in Bahrain
:()) 2010)(Arabic Text).
101
International Crisis Group, Bahrains Sectarian Challenge (6 May 2005)
http://www.crisisgroup.org/~/media/Files/Middle%20East%20North%20Africa/Iran%20Gulf/
Bahrain/Bahrains%20Sectarian%20Challenge.pdf.
102
On the effects of the Iranian revolution on Middle East politics, see: R.K. Ramazani, Irans
Foreign Policy: Contending Orientations (1989) 43 Middle East Journal 202; Eva Rakel,
Iranian Foreign Policy since the Iranian Islamic Revolution: 1979-2006 (2007) 6
Perspectives on Global Development and Technology 159. See also Christin Marschall, Irans
Persian Gulf Policy: From Khomeini to Khatami (Routledge Curzon 2003); Frauke HeardBey, Die arabischen Golfstaaten im Zeichen der islamischen Revolution (Vertrieb 1983).
103
Thomas Naff, Gulf Security and the Iran-Iraq War (Middle East Research Institute1985).
104
Husain Al-Baharna, The Fact-finding Mission of the United Nations Secretary-General and
the Settlement of the Bahrain-Iran Dispute (1973) 22 International & Comparative Law
Quarterly 541. See also Erik Jensen, The Secretary-Generals Use of Good Offices and the
Question of Bahrain (1985) 14 Millennium: Journal of International Studies 335; Rouhollah
Ramazani, The Settlement of the Bahrain Dispute (1972) 12 Indian Journal of International
Law 1.
100
26
105
SC res 278 (1970) (The question of Bahrain), 12 May 1970. See also Edward Gordon,
The Resolution of the Bahrain Dispute (1971) 65 American Journal of International Law
560, pp 560-61.
106
According to the International Crisis Group, this shift in the political scene in Bahrain was
profound: Prior to 1979, the government did not pursue a specifically sectarian agenda, since
it viewed the most serious threat as emanating from radical leftist organizations. International
Crisis
Group,
Bahrains
Sectarian
Challenge
(6
May
2005)
http://www.crisisgroup.org/~/media/Files/Middle%20East%20North%20Africa/Iran%20Gulf/
Bahrain/Bahrains%20Sectarian%20Challenge.pdf accessed 16 November 2011.
107
Louay Bahry, The Socioeconomic Foundations of the Shiite Opposition in Bahrain
(2000) 11 Mediterranean Quarterly 129.
108
Abdulhadi Almadrasy was a prominent Shia figure in Iraq who lived in exile in Kuwait. He
was granted Bahraini citizenship and becoming a well-known religious figure in Bahrain. He
was accused of being behind unrest in Bahrain after the Islamic revolution in Iran, including
the coup attempt in 1981. His Bahraini citizenship was revoked and he was deported from the
country.
109
The Islamic Front for the Liberation of Bahrain, also known as al-Jabhah al-Islamiyyah li
Tahrir al-Bahrain, was founded in 1976. The available information indicates that the front is
based in Damascus but has offices in London and Tehran. The organisation is led by
Muhammad Ali al Khadhari and Abd al-Hamid al-Radhi, who headed its London office. The
Front advocates more radical changes in Bahrain, calling for the application of Sharia law and
the replacement of the Ruling Family. See Louay Bahry, The Opposition in Bahrain: A
Bellwether for the Gulf? (1997) 5(2) Middle East Policy 42.
110
Kenneth Pollack, The Persian Puzzle: The Conflict Between Iran and America (Random
House 2004) 281.
27
111
The leaders of this movement, also called Harakat Ahrar al Bahrayn al-Islamiyyah, include
Saeed Alshehabi and Mansour Aljamri. According to some sources, this organisation has
relatively moderate Islamic views, especially when compared with more radical Shiite groups.
Generally, it does not demand the application of Sharia law, but would be satisfied with the
application of the 1973 constitution and a better distribution of wealth among Bahrainis. Louay
Bahry, The Opposition in Bahrain: A Bellwether for the Gulf? (1997) 5(2) Middle East
Policy 42.
112
Human Rights Watch, Widespread Arrests of Pro-Democracy Activists in Bahrain (19
December 1994), cited in F. Gregory Gause III, The Gulf Conundrum: Economic Change,
Population Growth, and Political Stability in the GCC State (1997) 20(1) The Washington
Quarterly 142.
113
Louay Bahry, The Socioeconomic Foundations of the Shiite Opposition in Bahrain
(2000) 11(3) Mediterranean Quarterly 129.
114
Louay Bahry, The Socioeconomic Foundations of the Shiite Opposition in Bahrain
(2000) 11(3) Mediterranean Quarterly 129
115
The GoB claimed that the leaders of this organisation included Saeed Alshehabi, Mansour
Aljamri, Ali Salman Ahmed Salman and Hamza Kathem Aldiri. See also F. Gregory Gause
28
G.
87.
By all accounts, the ascension to power of the current monarch, HM
King Hamad, ushered in an era of hope, with optimism that the political,
economic and social sources of discontent among Bahrainis would be
addressed. This optimism was founded on the numerous steps that the
countrys new ruler undertook to ameliorate many of the grievances that had
caused civil unrest in Bahrain during the previous decade.118 The reforms
introduced by the monarch put Bahrain, according to a leading international
think tank, at the cutting edge of regional liberalization.119
88.
Among the first steps to be taken was the release of hundreds of
prisoners and detained individuals who had participated in the disturbances of
the mid-1990s120 and the pardoning of the major opposition figure Sheikh
III, The Gulf Conundrum: Economic Change, Population Growth, and Political Stability in
the GCC State (1997) 20(1) The Washington Quarterly 142, p 145.
116
Munira Fakhro, The Uprising in Bahrain: An Assessment in Gary G. Sick & Lawrence G.
Potter (eds), The Persian Gulf at the Millennium: Essays in Politics, Economy, Security, and
Religion (St Martins Press 1997). See also Ute Meinel, Die Intifada im lscheichtum
Bahrain: Hintergrnde des Aufbegehrens von 1994-1998 (Mnster, 2003); Karen Dabrowska,
Bahrain Briefing: The Struggle for Democracy, December 1994-December 1996 (Colourmast
1997).
117
Human Rights Watch, Routine Abuse, Routine Denial: Civil Rights and the Political Crisis
in Bahrain (1997). See also Joe Stork, Bahrains Crisis Worsens (1997) 204 (Winter) Middle
East Report 33, pp 33-34.
118
David Ransom, Bahrain: New Emir, New Vision (2001) 16(3) Middle East Insight 35, pp
35-36.
119
International Crisis Group, Bahrains Sectarian Challenge (6 May 2005)
http://www.crisisgroup.org/~/media/Files/Middle%20East%20North%20Africa/Iran%20Gulf/
Bahrain/Bahrains%20Sectarian%20Challenge.pdf accessed 16 November 2011.
120
According to Amnesty International: On 6 June 1999, the Emir ordered the release of 320
people held without charge or trial in connection with anti-government protests and 41
political prisoners serving prison terms. On 17 November 1999 he ordered the release of
another 200 political prisoners and detainees. On the occasion of Bahrains national day, 16
December, 195 political detainees and prisoners were released following a pardon from the
Emir. Another 37 prisoners and detainees were released during the second half of March 2000
following an amnesty by the Emir to mark the religious Islamic holiday of Eid al-Adha (Feast
of the Sacrifice). To mark the Islamic New Year on 5 April 2000 the Emir also ordered the
release of 43 detainees held for involvement in anti-government protests. Most of those
released were held without charge or trial, some for up to five years. Amnesty International,
Bahrain: Human Rights Developments and Amnesty Internationals Continuing Concerns,
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30
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137
See Hassan Fatah, Report Cites Bid by Sunnis in Bahrain to Rig Elections, New York
Times (2 October 2006); Lauren Frayer, Al-Bandar Ejection Exposes Bahrain Split,
Washington Post (2 October 2006); Alain Gresh, Bandargate et Tensions Confessionnelles,
Le Monde Diplomatique (19 October 2006).
138
Amnesty International, Crackdown in Bahrain, Human Rights at the Crossroads (2011)
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/MDE11/001/2011/en/cb766afa-fba0-4218-95ecf4648b85e620/mde110012011en.pdf accessed 16 November 2011.
139
See Steven Wright, Fixing the Kingdom: Political Evolution and Socio-Economic
Challenges in Bahrain, Qatar Occasional Papers No.3, Georgetown University Center for
International and Regional Studies (2010) p 9.
140
See International Crisis Group, Popular Protests in North Africa and the Middle East (III):
The
Bahrain
Revolt
(6
April
2011)
http://www.crisisgroup.org/~/media/files/middle%20east%20north%20africa/iran%20gulf/bah
rain/105%20popular%20protests%20in%20north%20africa%20and%20the%20middle%20east%20iii-the%20bahrain%20revolt.pdf p 3, accessed 16 November 2011.
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141
Kenneth Katzman, Bahrain: Reform, Security, and U.S. Policy (Congressional Research
Service, 2 March 2011) http://fpc.state.gov/documents/organization/158480.pdf p 4, accessed
16 November 2011.
142
Kenneth Katzman, Bahrain: Reform, Security, and U.S. Policy (Congressional Research
Service, 2 March 2011) http://fpc.state.gov/documents/organization/158480.pdf p 4, accessed
16 November 2011.
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