Bahraini prisoners’ families hold small protest during pope visit
Activists say the protesters were taken away from the protest site in a police vehicle and later released.
Relatives of death row and life inmates in Bahrain have held a small protest along Pope Francis’s motorcade route calling for the freedom of political prisoners in the Gulf Arab state.
It was not clear if the pope saw the placards as his motorcade moved from his residence to a school in Isa Town where he later addressed students and teachers. About 30,000 flag-waving worshippers attended an open-air mass on Saturday.
A video of Saturday’s protest, which included several women and children, was posted online by the London-based Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD) and by Bahrain’s dissolved opposition al-Wefaq group.
Hajer Mansoor, the mother of jailed activist Sayed Nizar al-Wadaei, held a placard reading: “Tolerance does not exist for us here in Bahrain.”
One of the placards read “Tolerance, Coexistence is a practice not just slogan. #Free Hassan Mushaima #Free Political Prisoners #End Sectarianism”.
Hassan Mushaima, an opposition leader, was given a life sentence in 2011 for anti-government protests, led mostly by the Shia Muslim community. The Sunni monarchy cracked down on the unrest.
In the video, a policeman can be heard telling the demonstrators, who included a small boy, “If you please, if you have demands, if you have anything, not in this way and not in this manner”.
A government spokesperson said that a group of nine individuals were asked to disperse by uniformed police and “acceded to the request,” according to the Reuters news agency.
“No further action is being taken in this regard,” the spokesperson said in a statement, adding that there “have been no arrests or apprehensions related to the Papal visit”.
‘Protesters released’
Earlier, BIRD said in a statement that the protesters were taken away from the site in a police vehicle and later released.
Before the pope arrived in Bahrain on Thursday, families of death row inmates asked him to speak out against capital punishment and defend political prisoners during the trip.
He did so in his first address on Friday to government authorities and the diplomatic corps.
On Thursday, the first day of his four-day visit, the pontiff called for an end to discrimination and human rights violations.
It is vital that “fundamental human rights are not violated but promoted”, the pope said on Thursday at the Sakhir royal palace on his first visit to the Gulf Arab state, where the Shia Muslim opposition and rights groups accuse the Sunni monarchy of overseeing human rights abuses, a charge authorities deny.
Bahrain was the only Gulf state to see mass Arab Spring upheaval. It has imprisoned thousands, some in mass trials, since the uprising.
The kingdom has rejected criticism from the United Nations and others over its conduct of trials and detention conditions, saying its prosecutions were in accordance with international law.
Last year, Bahrain conditionally released tens of prisoners under new rules allowing electronic monitoring and home detention instead. Mushaima’s son said then that his father had declined a conditional release offer.