• Authorities block Web sites critical of the government, the king, and Islam.
• Officials pursue politicized court complaints against critical reporters.
Key Statistic
1,040: Web sites that the Ministry of Information ordered censored in September.
Bahrain has made significant strides in improving its human rights record since political reforms enacted in 2001, particularly concerning universal suffrage and the dismantlement of an abusive state security court system. But some reforms have yet to be fully realized, among them improving political representation for the marginalized Shiite majority and ensuring more equitable standing for women in family courts. The press freedom climate, which had improved with the establishment of seven independent newspapers in the wake of the 2001 reforms, has undergone a gradual deterioration over the past several years. That decline accelerated in 2009 as the government blocked domestic access to more than 1,000 Web sites and pursued politicized court complaints against critical journalists.
ATTACKS ON
THE PRESS: 2009
• Main Index
MIDDLE EAST and NORTH AFRICA
• Regional Analysis:
Human rights coverage spreads despite government pushback
Country Summaries
• Bahrain
• Egypt
• Iran
• Iraq
• Israel, Occupied Palestinian Territories
• Libya
• Morocco
• Sudan
• Tunisia
• Yemen
• Other developments
Culture and Information
Minister Sheikha Mai bint Muhammad Al-Khalifa issued an order in January compelling Internet service providers to block Web
sites identified as offensive by the ministry. Despite protests from numerous
press freedom groups, including CPJ, the government blocked dozens of sites in
the first eight months of the year. The censorship effort escalated in
September, when the Ministry of Information ordered the Telecommunications
Regulatory Authority, the government’s Internet regulator, to block 1,040 more
sites, according to the
With one of the most
Web-connected populations in the region—a third of its residents are
online—Bahrain had been home to hundreds of Web sites, according to the Bahrain
Center for Human Rights. Among them were about 200 blogs, many focusing on
political and social issues and most written anonymously.
The online dichotomy
reflects the country’s political development over the past decade: Steps toward
reform and transparency have been followed by steps back toward repression.
Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa replaced his more conservative father in 1999 as emir
and proclaimed himself king in 2002. In response to decades-long demands from
the country’s dispossessed Shiite majority, he led the institution of
significant reforms in 2001 that included the release of political prisoners,
the return of exiles, and the drafting of a new constitution that resurrected
parliament after three decades of dormancy. After the reforms of 2001,
Despite constitutional
guarantees for press freedom, government agencies continued to enforce the
heavy-handed Press and Publications Law of 2002, which prescribes prison terms
of up to five years for material considered an affront to Islam or the king,
and content perceived as undermining state security or the monarchy. The
appointed upper chamber of parliament has twice proposed press law
amendments—most recently in 2008—intended to mitigate its harshest provisions,
but an elected lower chamber dominated by conservative elements has
consistently turned back those proposals.
Government officials
pursued politicized criminal complaints against two journalists who had
produced investigative reports on alleged public corruption. In each case, the
government appeared less intent on jailing the journalists than on harassing
them through repeated court summonses.
Maryam al-Shrooqi, a
reporter for the independent daily Al-Wasat, was found guilty in September on insult
charges stemming from a 2008 article that alleged religious discrimination in
the hiring policies of the Department of Civil Services. The department had
filed a criminal complaint, accusing her of insult and the more serious charges
of fabrication and defamation. The Supreme Criminal Court eventually dismissed
the most serious charges and fined al-Shrooqi 50 dinars (US$133). The court
also ordered Al-Wasat to print a summary of the verdict in the same
place in the paper as the original article. An appeal was pending in late year.
Lamees Dhaif, a columnist
for the privately owned daily Al-Waqt, was also summoned to court on charges of
insulting the judiciary in a series, “The Dossier of Great Shame,” published in
February. The pieces detailed alleged bias against women in family courts, reflecting
one of the unfulfilled political reforms of 2001. The Supreme Judicial Council,
the judiciary’s highest administrative body, had lodged a criminal complaint
against Dhaif after she refused a judiciary official’s demands to write an
apology and an article praising the court system. The prosecution was suspended
in September but can be resurrected at any time.

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