Originally posted on Human Rights Now (Amnesty International USA blog)
By Sanjeev Bery
July 6, 2012
Despite an outpouring of global concern, news reports indicate that the Government of Bahrain has still not dropped its charges against 11 year old Ali Hassan.
As I wrote earlier this week, Bahraini police arrested the young boy in mid-May on a street that is both near his home and the site of a protest. The police denied him access to a lawyer for 23 days of his nearly one month of detention.
Amnesty International is confirming the details of yesterday’s court decision regarding the young boy’s sentence. According to news reports, the Government of Bahrain has allowed Ali to live at home, but is requiring him to be subjected to government monitoring for a year. The reports also indicate that the original charge of “illegal gathering” and disturbing “public security” has still not been dropped.
On the one hand, the young boy appears to have been spared the worse case scenario of several years in jail. This demonstrates the power of the global human rights spotlight, in which worldwide concern for Ali put pressure on the Government of Bahrain to keep him out of prison. But at the same time, Ali appears to still be facing criminal charges. Continue reading “Update: Bahrain Keeps Ridiculous Charges Against 11-Year-Old Boy”