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The ’spoiled’ son of the King: Nasser..The torturer

2012-04-25 - 5:27 p






Bahrain mirror (Exclusive):
Nabeel Rajab, President of the Center of Human Rights in Bahrain, Vice President of International Confederation of Human Rights, keeps challenging the authorities in Bahrain to prosecute those involved in the abuses and torture perpetrated on the people of Bahrain for a year.

Rajab has recently revealed an attention-grabbing step that translated into determined and continuous efforts to escalate the issue of the torture practiced, in person, by the "spoiled" son of the King Nasser Bin Hamad Al Khalifa against a group of prisoners. One of these prisoners is the well known religious cleric Shaikh Mohammed Habib Al-Miqdad, who suffered from a nonstop torture, beatings and verbal abuse.

Rajab – on his Twitter account – mentioned that he will soon move to highlight the issues of torture practiced by Nasser Bin Hamad Al Khalifa on the detainees and athletes for the British media and social networking, taking advantage of the presence of the King's son in England next summer where he will attend the Olympics Games to be hosted by London's Metropolitan in the period between July 27 to August 12 this year. The King's son is attending the games as the President of the Bahrain Olympic Committee.

Rajab has never stopped announcing his plan to escalate this subject in the British media. Not only that, Rajab has taken further step beyond that by demanding to legally prosecute the King's son or at the very least preventing him from entering the UK.  Rajab is taking the subject extremely seriously.

Some sources confirmed that the Bahrain Center for Human Rights and other organizations have already started the process of preparing reports and gathering necessary notes that may seem enough to "overthrow" Nasser Bin Hamad while in London, keeping him between "the devil and the deep sea"; i.e. either a prosecution in the UK or prohibited from entering the country. Both will sign the King's son in a scandal when attending the Olympics Games and certainly among the British society … Would Rajab's efforts and his comrades succeed in that?






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