The Grand Prix race in Bahrain kicked off at 6 pm on 6 April 2014. Bahraini protesters have been rallying against the race for a few months preceding the event but to no avail. Three Bahraini rights organisations have released a statement condemning the rise in human rights violations in light of the event.
This joint statement was first published on 6 April 2014.
On the morning of the Grand Prix race which will take place at 6 pm today [6 April 2014] in Sakhir, the Bahrain Center for Human Rights (BCHR), Bahrain Institute for Rights & Democracy (BIRD) and Bahrain Youth Society for Human Rights (BYSHR) note their concern for the growing violations against civilians in Bahrain.
It has been evident that in the months preceding the race, many civilian protesters have taken to the streets to protest the Federation Internationale de l’Automobile’s (FIA) decision to schedule Bahrain for the Grand Prix.
Protesters have taken up various methods to express their anger towards the race going ahead. One video posted on YouTube shows the incineration of F1 tickets, as well as people burning pictures of F1’s Bernie Ecclestone and Bahrain’s King Hamad Al-Khalifa.
Messages of protest have been posted on social media as well. Many pictures and statuses like this one were posted on Twitter and Facebook. Some protesters have even appealed to the international community by deploying more heartfelt messages. This video posted on YouTube, shares the voice of a Bahraini child who asks: “Does the Grand Prix matter more than human beings?”
Unfortunately, as the race goes on, the world has come to the conclusion that it just might.
Reports of human rights violations have steadfastingly been reaching international NGOs in the run-up to the race.
On 1 April, a video was leaked of a child being arrested by security forces. The boy was hit twice in the face with the officer’s gun and dragged away from a distraught woman who called after him.
On the following day, five civilians were sentenced to five years in jail for illegal gathering and arson – their trial is neither fair, nor independent. On 3 April, the first day of Grand Prix practices in Sakhir, people marched in a demonstration for 20-year-old Hussain Sharaf’s funeral procession, an event which was interrupted and attacked by security forces.
The procession took place in Eker village, where three photojournalists reported being shot at with bird pellets. People on the ground not only reported the use of birdshot but also an exorbitant use of teargas as well. The account given also reported that mercenary forces came back with their jeeps to try and run over the crowd of protesters. On the same day, there were also reports of pellet shot injuries in Malkiya village protests, teargas reports on the streets of Al Qarya, and reports on the use of teargas in Bahraini homes.
On the first day of the training race, civilians faced similar conditions. Approximately 10 civilians were arrested at dawn during house raids on 4 April. Two of those arrested, Mohsen Zaher and Mohsen Jassim, were children. An additional 16 people were arrested throughout the day in the towns of Eker, Nuwaidrat and Sitra, without any presentation of an arrest warrant.
On 5 April, protesters took to the streets again as the qualifying stage of the Grand Prix proceeded. Protests took place all over the country including in the villages of Muharraq, Sanabis, Salmabad, Ghuraifa, Musalla and Bilad Al Qadeem. In the village of Saar, an anti-F1 protest was attacked by security forces who used teargas against the masses. Additionally in the village of Banjimrah, civilians reported multiple pellet injuries perpetrated by Bahraini forces. In Maameer and various other villages, a similar situation was reported, with teargas and bird pellet being used as the main weapons against protesters.
On the morning of the Grand Prix Race, around the time this statement was published, house raids were underway and are still ongoing in Malkiya, Aali, Sitra and Daih, with eight reported arrests so far.
BCHR, BYSHR and BIRD will continue to follow protests in Bahrain and will be watching developments on the ground closely during the race.