11 April 2011 Last updated at 12:46 GMT

Bahrain unrest: Torture fears as activists die in jail


Two Bahraini Shia activists who were detained after weeks of anti-government 
protests have died in police custody.

The interior ministry said Ali Issa Saqer, 31, had died when guards tried to 
restrain him for "causing chaos".

Another detainee, Zakaraya Rashed Hassan, 40, had died of sickle cell disease, 
the ministry added. It was the second such death in a week.

Several Shia activists have complained of being tortured while in custody. The 
government denies the allegations.

Bahrain imposed emergency rule last month after weeks of anti-government 
protests in the tiny Gulf kingdom, where the Sunni monarchy is accused of 
discrimination against the Shia majority.

The authorities used force to put down the protests, which started on 14 
February and have left more than 25 people dead.

Rights groups say the government has since detained more than 400 people - 
including human rights activists, doctors, bloggers and opposition supporters.
'Lash marks'

The interior ministry said Mr Saqer was injured while resisting guards' 
attempts to restrain him. He later died in a hospital.
Continue reading the main story
Newspapers with headlines reporting Bahrain has suspended opposition newspaper 
Al-Wasat in a coffee shop in Manama, 3 April

    * Leading Bahrain activist arrested
    * Bahrain becoming 'island of fear'

Photos taken before his burial showed criss-cross purple lash marks all over 
his back. His legs were also badly bruised, and his toes and feet were covered 
in purple bruises.

There was a big bruise on the left side of his head and possible burn marks on 
his ankles and wrists, said Daniel Williams, a senior researcher with Human 
Rights Watch (HRW), who viewed the body as it was being prepared for burial.

"This looked much worse than anything I've seen," Mr Williams said, referring 
to other cases in Bahrain of apparent lash marks seen on the backs of people 
detained at checkpoints.

Mr Saqer was arrested on 13 March for the attempted murder of a policeman, the 
ministry said. The government denies any torture but says all such accusations 
will be investigated.

It said the other detainee, Mr Hassan, had been "found dead" in his cell. A 
post-mortem said he died of complications from sickle-cell anaemia.

Mr Hassan was detained on 2 April on charges of "inciting hatred, publishing 
false news, promoting sectarianism and calling for the overthrow of the regime" 
on social networking sites, the interior ministry said.

HRW said both the families of the men who died of sickle-cell disease, 
according to official records, had dismissed the findings.

"It is extremely scary that in all three cases of the deaths last week, the 
families only heard about their loved ones when they were dead," Mr Williams 
told the BBC.

HRW has called for an investigation into all suspected cases of abuse, and 
stressed that all detainees must be given access to lawyers and their families.
Campaign of fear

In the two most recent cases, Bahraini activists say the men were abused 
physically and mentally, and may have died as a result.

"We believed they killed them in prison," said Nabeel Rajab of the Bahrain 
Center for Human Rights.

On Monday, the authorities accused Mr Rajab of publishing fabricated images on 
the internet and summoned him for questioning.

Meanwhile, the former chief editor of Bahrain's main opposition newspaper - 
al-Wasat - said he too had been summoned by a prosecutor investigating the 
paper's allegedly unethical coverage of the uprising.

The latest moves come two days after a leading opposition figure and rights 
activist, Abdul Hadi al-Khawaja, was beaten up and arrested in the capital, 
Manama.

The unrest started on 14 February, when Shia protesters - emboldened by 
uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt - took to the streets urging democratic reform. 
Some called for the overthrow of the monarchy.

Weeks of protests prompted the Sunni-led government to impose martial law and 
invite in troops from Sunni-ruled neighbours such as Saudi Arabia and the 
United Arab Emirates.

Since then the Bahrain government - a key US ally in the region - has launched 
a crackdown against opposition activists, journalists and doctors.

It accuses Iran of fomenting the unrest - which Tehran denies.




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