Staffers at Bahrain embassy in London try to throw protester off rooftop

A frame grab shows first-responders deployed to the area in front of the Bahraini Embassy in London, where embassy staffers reportedly attempted to throw a protester off the rooftop, on July 27, 2019.

Staffers at the Bahraini regime’s embassy in London have beaten and reportedly attempted to throw an activist off the diplomatic building’s roof as he was protesting the regime’s recent execution of three pro-democracy campaigners.

The activist, Musa Akrawi, had scaled the walls of the embassy on Saturday to protest Manama’s execution of campaigners.

He recorded a video of himself after reaching the building’s roof, where he chanted slogans against the Bahraini regime.

Addressing Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Akrawi said, “Call your friend King Hamad [of Bahrain] to stop the killing.”

Reports said that embassy staffers beat Akrawi, verbally abused him, and tried to throw him off the rooftop.

Another video showed members of the Metropolitan Police deployed to the area. A police officer is seen telling the camera, “He’s not being mistreated. Not by us,” referring to Akrawi.

Other accounts showed that the police had to break down the facility’s door in order to be able to intervene.

The Bahraini regime carried out the executions on Friday, in defiance of widespread calls to commute the verdicts, which had been handed down in a mass trial.

The case of the two activists executed — Ahmad al-Malali, 24, and Ali Hakim al-Arab, 25 — caught special international attention. The duo had been handed down the conviction along with another 56 men last year on “terrorism crimes.”

The New York-based Human Rights Watch said the trial had been “marred by torture allegations and due process violations.

Since February 2011, Bahraini people have been regularly holding peaceful protest rallies, demanding that the Al Khalifah family relinquish power and that a just and representative system be established.

They have also been complaining about widespread discrimination against the country’s Shia majority.

The Manama regime has responded to the demonstrations with an iron fist. The authorities have detained rights campaigners, broken up major opposition political parties, revoked the nationality of many pro-democracy activists, and deported those left stateless.

Hundreds have also been killed during the regime crackdown.


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