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Kuwait Bidoun Activists, Including Al-Fadli
Brothers, Detained, Beaten, and Tortured for Protesting their Stateless
Status
By Human Rights Watch
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, April 6, 2014
Kuwait: No Response to Torture Allegation Detainees Told
Prosecutor of Beatings
A Kuwaiti prosecutor’s failure to investigate torture allegations
raises questions about whether the alleged abusers of two detained
brothers will escape justice, Human Rights Watch said.
The
detainees, Abdul Hakim and Abdul Nasser al-Fadhli, told the investigating
prosecutor on their first appearance before him on February 26, 2014, that
the police had beaten them in custody, Abdul Hakim al-Fadhli told Human
Rights Watch on March 25. But neither has since been examined for signs of
abuse. The two brothers are active in the
Bidoun community, people who have lived in
Kuwait for many years but are considered stateless. The brothers have
been detained since late February on charges revolving around an
“unlawful” demonstration in February to support Bidoun rights.
“Instead of ordering an investigation when these defendants said they had
been tortured, the prosecutor ordered them back to detention,” said
Eric Goldstein, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human
Rights Watch. “When a prosecutor ignores torture allegations, it sends the
message to police that abuse will go unpunished.”
On March 31, a
judge renewed the detention of Abdul Hakim al-Fadhli for another seven
days, and convicted Abdul Nasser al-Fadhli of a minor offense. He has yet
to be sentenced but the Kuwait Human Rights Society president, Mohammed
al-Humaidi, one of the lawyers involved in the case, said that Abdul
Nasser al-Fadhli could be sentenced to a maximum of three years in prison.
Authorities have been holding a third Bidoun activist, Abdullah Attallah
al-Enizi, since February in connection with the same demonstrations and on
March 31 extended his detention until April 6. Kuwaiti law prohibits
non-Kuwaiti nationals from holding demonstrations.
Police arrested
the al-Fadhlis on February 24 and interrogated them without a lawyer
present, which the police are permitted to do under Kuwait’s Code of
Criminal Procedure No. 17 of 1960. Police brought the men before the
public prosecutor on February 26. At that hearing, each of the brothers
said the police had tortured him in custody, and Abdul Hakim al-Fadhli
requested a medical examination, he and the brothers’ lawyer, Salah al-Shammiri,
told Human Rights Watch. The prosecutor did not respond, and neither has
had any medical examination to check for signs of abuse, Abdul Hakim al-Fadhli
said.
Al-Shammiri attempted to enter the courtroom for the February
26 hearing, but guards kept him out until the session was nearly finished.
Under Kuwaiti law, a defendant can ask the court to postpone questioning
until a defense lawyer can be present. But Abdul Hakim al-Fadhli told the
court that he preferred to finish the questioning, even in the absence of
a defense lawyer, so he could be transferred to Kuwait Central Prison
instead of State Security Headquarters, since he feared continued beatings
if returned there.
Al-Shammiri told Human Rights Watch he observed
bruises on Abdul Nasser al-Fadhli’s hands at that hearing.
Bidoun
activists held protests on February 18 to mark the third anniversary of
large-scale Bidoun protests demanding citizenship. Al-Enizi, a Bidun
activist detained for 103 days in
2012, gave a speech at a protest in the suburb of Taima, in which he
criticized the Emir, saying, “We used to think that you did not know of
our plight, but now there is media exposure, so I want to tell you that
you are to blame for this.” Al-Enizi was arrested on February 19 and
appeared that night before the public prosecutor, who ordered him to be
detained pending an investigation on charges of insulting the Emir.
In response to the arrest of al-Enizi and to press their demands for
Kuwaiti citizenship for Bidoun, activists continued to protest between
February 19 and 24. Al-Shammiri told Human Rights Watch that the police
summoned Abdul Hakim al-Fadhli to the Taima police station on February 20
for questioning but released him. State Security agents pursued the
brothers as they drove down the street on February 24 and then arrested
them, family members said. They said that Abdul Hakim al-Fadhli had been
detained in May 2012 for 10 days, and again from December 11, 2012, until
March 24, 2013, during which time he went on a
hunger strike for 73 days.
Abdul Hakim al-Fadhli, who called
Human Rights Watch from prison on March 25, said of the most recent
arrest: They beat me severely in the car on the way to their
headquarters. They interrogated me at the state security headquarters for
four hours. During that time they hit me all over my body with their hands
and used a stick to hit me in the chest and back. They demanded that I
write and sign a confession to the charges against me that they would
dictate to me. I refused and when they realized that they could not force
me to, one officer pushed me against the wall and said, “Do what we say,
or we will rape you.” I refused and demanded to see a court order for my
arrest and the ID cards of the officers interrogating me. They refused.
He said that during the first night and second day of his detention
he refused to eat, demanding that the police bring him before the
prosecutor. That night, he said, the security officers took him to Jaber
Al-Ahmed Armed Forces Hospital, where doctors examined him in the
officers’ presence.
He said he told the first two doctors who
examined him that state security officers had beaten him to extract a
confession, and that the doctors said they would not address this
allegation but would check his overall health.
Doctors attempted to
convince him to eat, he said. He spent the night in the hospital chained
to the bed. One doctor said that if he did not eat anything, the medical
staff would force-feed him glucose, though they did not. He remained in
the hospital between the first and second court hearing, but then was
returned to state security headquarters even though he had told the
prosecutor on February 26 that he had been tortured there, where he
continued his hunger strike.
On March 1, the authorities
transferred all three men to the Central Prison. A judge renewed their
detention orders on March 3, March 17, and March 24, pending further
investigation. All three have been on hunger strike since March 17, al-Shammiri
told Human Rights Watch on March 31. Abdul Hakim al-Fadhli is due in court
on April 8 for another extension hearing and Abdullah al-Fadhli on April
6.
Al-Shammiri told Human Rights Watch that Abdul Hakim al-Fadhli
is charged with incitement to participate in an unlawful demonstration,
damaging security vehicles and assaulting security officers. His brother
was initially charged with damaging security vehicles and assaulting
security officers, as well as participation in an unlawful demonstration,
harboring a fugitive, and reckless driving. He was acquitted of all
criminal charges on March 31 when he was instead convicted of a minor
offense.
Authorities arrested four other men at the protests
between February 19 and 24: Hussein Jabr, Youssef Matar, Ahmad Sa’ad and
Mush'el Mut'eb. They were released on bail on March 10. All four face
charges of participating in an illegal gathering, local human rights
activists who are monitoring their cases told Human Rights Watch.
For more Human Rights Watch reporting on Kuwait, please visit:
http://www.hrw.org/middle-eastn-africa/kuwait
For more
information, please contact:
In Sanaa, Belkis Wille (English, Arabic, French, German): +967-71 401
2494 (mobile); or willeb@hrw.org.
Follow on Twitter @belkiswille
In New York, Eric Goldstein (English, French): +1-917-519-4736
(mobile); or goldstr@hrw.org. Follow
on Twitter @goldsteinricky
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