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Bahrain jails three Shias, strips them of nationality

Published: 21 Nov 2014 - 09:23 am | Last Updated: 19 Jan 2022 - 10:03 am

Bahrain’s Minister of State for Information Affairs and government spokesperson Samira bin Rajab speaks to reporters during the opening of the elections media centre in Manama yesterday. Rajab said an opposition boycott would not affect tomorrow’s elections.

DUBAI: A court jailed three Bahraini Shias yesterday and stripped them of their nationality for planning an attack against the police in the Sunni-ruled kingdom, a judicial source said.
The men were jailed for 10 years each for having planned an attack with explosives on policemen in August 2013, the source said.
Hundreds of Shias have been arrested and faced trial in Bahrain since a month-long uprising calling for democratic reform was quelled in March 2011.
Bahrain last year adopted a law stipulating that suspects convicted of “terrorist” acts could be stripped of their nationality, a decision that has triggered condemnation by rights groups.
Dozens of Shias have had their citizenship revoked since the law came into effect, and several have also been deported on charges of “undermining state security”.
The latest verdicts come as Bahrain -- a Sunni-ruled kingdom with a Shia majority, prepares to hold elections on Saturday, with the opposition boycotting the polls.
The Shia-led opposition is demanding a “real” constitutional monarchy with an elected prime minister who is independent from the ruling royal family.
The tiny but strategic kingdom, just across the Gulf from Iran and home base for the US Fifth Fleet, remains deeply divided nearly four years after authorities crushed the uprising.
Protests in Shia villages around the capital still spark frequent clashes with police.
AFP