Amnesty International said Friday that Bahraini prisoners suffering cancer, multiple sclerosis and sickle-cell anaemia do not have access to medical care, accusing local authorities of negligence.
Family members of 11 Bahraini prisoners, including high-profile activists, described treatment ranging from “petty harassment to needless cruelty”, according to a new report by Amnesty.
Amnesty said their accounts, supported by documentary evidence, showed health care in Bahrain’s prison system was “marred by regular instances of negligence, delay, and arbitrary exercise of authority”.
Inmates with serious conditions like cancer and multiple sclerosis are regularly denied specialist care and pain medication, Amnesty said.
“Although medical treatment is provided, it is far from adequate, and prisoners are frequently subjected to disruptions, delays and needless, petty cruelty,” the report said.
“In one appalling case, a man with stage-three cancer was sent back to prison just days after a biopsy – the same individual recently had to wait for more than a month for his medication.”
Among the families interviewed are relatives of activist Hajer Mansoor Hassan, mother-in-law of Sayed Ahmed Wadei, head of advocacy for the London-based Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy.
The family of Ahmed Merza Ismaeel, half-brother of jailed cleric Sheikh Ali Salman, was also among those interviewed.
Source: AFP