Nonetheless, Iran became the most prominent suspect of inciting violence in the Kingdom, the
Bahraini Intelligence agency persisted in exposing the veiled Iranian efforts to exporting its revolution, this included smuggling weapons, smuggling large amounts of cash to Iran from Shia clergies and the Ayotallahs conspcious lectures encouraging Bahrains Shia population to repudiate government rule. This can be stemmed from Bahrain being under Persian Safavid rule, until the ruling family
defeated them (1782-1783).
2012 highway on 9 March According to the
Gulf Daily News on 1 February 2012, King Hamad's media affairs adviser Nabeel Al Hamer revealed plans for new talks between the opposition and the government on his Twitter account. He said that talks with political societies "had already begun to pave the way clear for a dialogue that would lead to a united Bahrain". The move was supported by Al Wefaq National Islamic Society former MP
Abduljalil Khalil, who said that the society was "ready for serious dialogue and this time had no preconditions". He reiterated that "People want serious reforms that reflect their will and what they really want for their future." However the National Unity Assembly board member Khalid Al Qoud said that his society would not participate in talks "until those behind the acts of violence were arrested". The call for dialogue was echoed by Crown Prince
Salman bin Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, who backed the initiative. The Bahrain Debate is an initiative organised "by the youth for the youth" that brings together young people from across the spectrum of Bahraini society to debate the political and social problems confronting the country, and their solutions. The debate is not funded or organised by any political group. Bahraini independents worried that the island will slide into sectarian violence also began an effort to break the political stalemate between pro-government and opposition forces. Dr.
Ali Fakhro, a former minister and ambassador "respected across the political spectrum", told Reuters that he hoped to get moderates from both sides together at a time when extremists are making themselves felt throughout the Gulf Arab state. Fakhro said the initiative, launched at a meeting on 28 January 2012, involved persuading opposition parties and pro-government groups meeting outside a government forum and agreeing on a list of basic demands for democratic reform. He launched the plan at a meeting of prominent Bahrainis with no official political affiliations or memberships, called the National Bahraini Meeting. A basic framework for discussion is the seven points for democratic reform announced by Crown Prince Salman in March 2011. Bahraini newspaper
Al Ayam reported on 7 March 2012 that the government and the opposition political societies were approaching an agreement to start a dialogue towards reconciliation and reunifying the country. On 9 March 2012, hundreds of thousands protested in one of the biggest anti-government rallies to date. According to
CNN, the march "filled a four-lane highway between
Diraz and Muksha". A Reuters photographer estimated the number to be over 100,000 and 250,000. Nabeel Rajab, president of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights called the march "the biggest in our history". On 10 April, seven policemen were injured when a homemade
bomb exploded in
Eker, the Ministry of the Interior said. The ministry blamed protesters for the attack. This was followed on 19 October by the
siege of Eker. On 18 April, in the run-up to the scheduled
2012 Bahrain Grand Prix, a car used by
Force India mechanics had been involved in a petrol bombing, though there were no injuries or damage. The team members had been travelling in an unmarked car and were held up by an impromptu
roadblock which they were unable to clear before a petrol bomb exploded nearby.
Protests and protesters sharply increased in the spotlight of international press for the Grand Prix, and to condemn the implicit endorsement of the government by Formula One.
2013 Inspired by the Egyptian
Tamarod Movement that played a role in the
removal of President
Mohamed Morsi, Bahraini opposition activists called for mass protests starting on 14 August, the forty second anniversary of
Bahrain Independence Day under the banner
Bahrain Tamarod. In response, the
Ministry of Interior (MoI) warned against joining what it called "illegal demonstrations and activities that endanger security" and stepped up security measures.
2014 On 3 March, a bomb blast by Shia protesters in the village of
Al Daih killed 3 police officers. One of the police officers killed was an Emirati policeman from the
Peninsula Shield Force. The two other officers killed were Bahraini policemen. 25 suspects were arrested in connection to the bombing. In response to the violence, the Cabinet of Bahrain designated various protest groups as terrorist organizations. Rajab was released from Jaw Prison in May 2014 after serving a two-year sentence on charges of "illegal gathering", "disturbing public order" and "calling for and taking part in demonstrations" in Manama "without prior notification". In November, the first parliamentary elections were held in Bahrain since the beginning of the protests despite boycotts held by the Shia-minority opposition. Protests has been met with tear gas and protests re-erupted in October 2014, as a new wave of demonstrations, and continued daily for years. Daily protests were held every day for 3 years, from 2011 to 2014. Sheikh
Ali Salman, the Secretary-General of
Al-Wefaq National Islamic Society was arrested on 28 December 2014, The case against Sheikh Ali Salman is based on recorded telephone conversations he had with the-then Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Qatar, Sheikh
Hamad Bin Jassim Bin Jabr Al Thani, in 2011. On 4 November 2018, he was sentenced to life imprisonment after being convicted of trumped-up spying charges. Two other al-Wefaq members, Ali al-Aswad and Sheikh Hassan Sultan, were convicted in their absence during the same trial.
2015 At the beginning of the year, thousands of demonstrators gathered after the arrest of the largest representative of the
Bahraini opposition,
Ali Salman, and demanded his release, but the police responded to the demonstrators by dispersing them with
tear gas and rubber bombs. The Bahraini Minister of Interior stated that "Bahrain is facing a new stage, and that the end of 2014 is considered an important and special security location in terms of the nature and diversity of events and how they affect the security situation." This was followed by the ruling on the head of the Shura Council of Al-Wefaq Society,
Jamil Kazem, for a period of six months A six-month prison sentence was also issued against the president of the
Bahrain Center for Human Rights,
Nabeel Rajab, with a fine of 200
Bahraini dinars in exchange for a stay of execution pending the appeal of the verdict. Before the end of January, the authorities issued a decree revoking the citizenship of 72 Bahraini citizens, including activists, media professionals and writers living abroad. The authority changed the location of two mosques for Shiite Muslims and moved them to tens of meters, which angered the Shiites, who represent the minority of the population. On the fourth anniversary of the Bahrain uprising, demonstrators came out in Shiite villages and raised pictures of Ali Salman and demanded his release. The authorities launched a campaign of arrests in response.
2016 in 2009 The death sentence issued against
Nimr Al-Nimr was carried out on the morning of 2 January 2016, and his execution coincided with the execution of 46 others in terrorism-related cases. The executions were carried out in 12 regions of the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Al-Nimr was accused of "aiding terrorists" that led to protests in
Qatif. Demonstrations erupted in villages after the execution of Nimr al-Nimr. On 20 June 2016, a week after the government of Bahrain suspended the main Shia opposition party al-Wefaq,
Isa Qassim was stripped of his Bahraini citizenship. An
interior ministry statement accused Sheikh Isa Qassim of "using his position to serve foreign interests" and "promote sectarianism and violence". Announcing the move to strip him of his Bahraini citizenship, the interior ministry said the cleric had "adopted theocracy and stressed the absolute allegiance to the clergy". It added that he had been in continuous contact with "organisations and parties that are enemies of the kingdom". Bahrain's
citizenship law allows for the cabinet to revoke the citizenship of anyone who "causes harm to the interests of the kingdom or behaves in a way inimical with the duty of loyalty to it". Due to persecution at the hands of the Sunni regime, in December 2018 he relocated to
Iraq. After the revocation of
Isa Qassim's citizenship, many people became angry. Protestors gathered at the house of Isa Qassim in
Diraz. They chanted slogans, "Down down Hamad," "With our souls and blood, we will redeem you,
Faqih." It was the second site where demonstrators gather after the
Pearl Roundabout, which was destroyed in February 2011. The protests continued for 337 days. On 17 July, Al Wefaq Association was permanently dissolved.
2017 At the beginning of the year on Sunday, the Bahraini Ministry of Interior announced that gunmen had launched an attack on Juw
prison in Bahrain, which resulted in "the escape of a number of convicts in terrorist cases" and the killing of a policeman. On 9 January,
the ministry said that it had thwarted an escape operation by terrorist elements who tried to escape to Iran, and the operation led to the killing of three of the fugitives and the arrest of others. On 15 January 2017, the
Cabinet of Bahrain passed a
capital punishment sentence of
execution by firing squad on three men found guilty for the bomb attack in 2014 that killed three security forces. In the early morning of Thursday, 26 January 2017, the militias of the so-called National Security Apparatus launched an attack on the protesters in front of the house of
Ayatollah Sheikh Isa Ahmed Qassim in the
Diraz area, which led to the injury of one person with a serious head injury, and he died on Friday, 24 March. On 23 May, the mercenary forces of the regime attacked again the demonstrators in front of the house of Isa Qassim, with a violent campaign that dispersed all the demonstrators, injuring dozens and killing 5 people. And the
Ministry of Interior issued a statement saying that the forces arrested 286 people, saying that they were violators, and many of them are wanted and dangerous, and convicted of terrorist cases. The government of Bahrain forcibly closed
Al-Wasat newspaper on 4 June 2017, in a move which Amnesty International termed an "all-out campaign to end independent reporting".
2018 On the morning of Wednesday, 7 February 2018, four young men
drowned in the territorial waters between Bahrain and the
Islamic Republic of Iran in mysterious circumstances while trying to flee to the Islamic Republic. The bodies of three of them were found on 15 February and the other on 5 March, and they were
buried in
Qom. Bahrain government revoked the citizenship of 115 people and handed 53 of them life sentences on terrorism-related charges. Since 2012, a total of 718 individuals have been stripped of their Bahraini nationality, including 231 since the beginning of 2018. In most cases these individuals were rendered stateless. Some have subsequently been forcibly expelled from Bahrain.
Hakeem al-Araibi was arrested on arrival in Thailand from Australia for a vacation in November 2018 on the basis of an
Interpol "
red notice" issued by Bahrain, and was held there pending deportation to Bahrain, which he opposed. There was a campaign urging Thailand not to extradite him until 11 February 2019, when the Thai Office of the Attorney-General dropped the extradition case against him at Bahrain's request. He was returned to Australia the next day and became an Australian citizen in the weeks thereafter. His case was widely reported on major news outlets throughout the world.
2019 On 16 April, A Bahraini court today convicted 139 people on terrorism charges in a mass trial involving a total of 169 defendants, sentencing them to prison terms of between three years and life in prison. In total, 138 of those convicted were arbitrarily stripped of their citizenship, and a further 30 were acquitted. "This trial also demonstrates how Bahrain's authorities are increasingly relying on revocation of nationality as a tool for repression – around 900 people have now been stripped of their citizenship since 2012." The authorities executed two Bahrainis convicted of "terrorism" by firing squad at dawn on Saturday, 27 July, as announced by the Kingdom's Public Prosecutor in a statement, while a third convict was executed in a separate murder case. The Public Prosecutor did not mention the names of the two Bahrainis, while human rights organizations had said that they were Ali Al-Arab (25 years) and Ahmed Al-Malali (24 years), calling for a suspension of the execution of the sentence against them. Judicial sources stated that they are from the Shiite sect. The attorney general's statement stated that the subject of the first case was "focused on joining a terrorist group, committing murder and possessing explosives and firearms in fulfillment of a terrorist purpose." The persons concerned were arrested in February 2017, and sentences were issued against them on 31 January 2018, and since then they have exhausted all appeals.
2020 In June,
Nabeel Rajab, head of the outlawed
Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, was released from prison on probation, after serving four years for posting on Twitter criticizing the government's human rights record. A Bahraini woman, Najah Yousef, told BBC Arabic that she had been tortured and raped in a security compound after protesting against the Formula 1 car race in 2017, and Ebtisam Al-Saegh confirmed that she had been subjected to similar violations in the same compound a few weeks later.
2021 Three detainees died in Bahraini prisons in 2021 amid allegations of medical negligence. Health and hygiene conditions in Bahrain's overcrowded prisons remain serious, leading to two major COVID-19 outbreaks. Prison authorities violently suppressed a peaceful sit-in at the Jau Prison, and security forces summoned for interrogation and arrested individuals who participated in protests calling for the release of their family members from detention. Twelve of the country's most prominent Shi'a civic, religious and political leaders remained in prison. Eleven had been in prison since 2011 for their participation in mass opposition demonstrations that year. Sheikh Ali Salman, leader of the largest legal political bloc in Bahrain between 2006 and 2011, continued serving a life sentence imposed in 2018 based on falsified charges of "spying" for Qatar.
2022 Serbia extradited a Bahraini political dissident to Bahrain in the early hours of 24 January 2022, despite an order by the European Court of Human Rights that specifically prohibited his extradition pending more information, Human Rights Watch said today. Bahraini authorities had previously subjected the dissident, Ahmed Jaffer Muhammad, 48, to torture and ill-treatment.
2023 On 30 May, the Saudi authorities executed two Bahrainis, Sadiq Thamer and Jaafar Sultan, for allegedly "joining a terrorist cell." Hundreds of Bahrainis took to the streets in several Bahraini regions to protest against the execution of the two young men by the Saudi authorities; the two were arrested on 8 May 2015, on the King Fahd Causeway, which connects Saudi Arabia and Bahrain. The Saudi authorities later charged them with preparing to blow up the bridge. Both Sultan and Thamer denied the charges against them, considering them to be politically motivated. Human rights organizations have documented their torture by Saudi security forces to extract confessions during detention. ==Censorship and repression==