Amnesty slams Bahrain for stripping citizenship of 72 dissidents

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Amnesty International urged Manama on Thursday to restore the citizenship of dozens of dissidents stripped of their Bahraini nationality in a decree handing them the same penalty as suspected extremists.

The rights watchdog said last Saturday’s decision against 72 people had treated peaceful activists in the same way as Bahrainis suspected of travelling to Iraq or Syria to fight for the Muslim State group.

“The authorities have put the names of a number of known Bahraini human rights and political activists on the same list as other Bahrainis who have been alleged IS fighters,” it said.

Amnesty said any move that risked leaving a person stateless should be taken only after due legal process and within the strict limits set by international conventions.

The Committee to Protect Journalists said the list included at least four journalists — all of whom were “forced into exile because of legal threats.”

“Bahraini journalists who dare to express critical views already face serious risks, including legal action and imprisonment. Now Bahrain is punishing them by taking away what they value most,” it said.

Information Minister Isa Abdulrahman al-Hammadi has said most of those targeted “are abroad and can challenge the decision legally”.

The Sunni-ruled but Shia -majority Gulf state has been wracked by unrest since security forces crushed Shia -led protests for a parliamentary government and a constitutional monarchy in 2011.

The kingdom’s main Shia opposition group, Al-Wefaq, has said around 50 of those stripped of their citizenship are dissidents living in exile.

One of them, Farhad Khorshid Afrah is being held by authorities after his arrest at Bahrain’s international airport upon his return home from Iran, it said.

Al-Wefaq said he had been stripped of his nationality while on pilgrimage to Shia holy sites in Iraq along with his wife and two daughters.

It is not the first time that Bahrain has used counter-terrorism powers to strip dissidents of their citizenship but last week’s decision targeted the largest number so far.