The event featured the sale of Turkish, Arabian and Iranian food items, benefiting the victims of the lethal crackdown by the Saudi-backed Bahraini regime.
A news photo exhibition also updated the guests on the latest developments in Saudi-occupied Bahrain.
The charity event included also a public discussion on the overall situation in the small Persian Gulf kingdom.
Berlin has been the scene of several protests against the brutal security clampdown in Bahrain and the subsequent Saudi military invasion of its neighbor.
The regime in Manama has stepped up its brutal crackdown in the past weeks, killing dozens of people, among them human rights activists who died under severe torture.
Hundreds of others have also been arrested in Bahrain.
The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay has censured the Bahraini government for arresting hundreds of anti-government protesters and even putting doctors and nurses on trial at an ad hoc “military court.”
Bahraini security forces have attacked dozens of mosques, schools, holy sites, and even graveyards in their efforts to suppress the opposition movement.
Meanwhile, a Lebanese-based human rights organization filed earlier this month a suit in the International Criminal Court in The Hague on behalf of the victims of the Bahraini regime.
The President of the International Coalition against Impunity (HOKOK) May El Khansa said she filed a lawsuit against Bahrain's ruling al-Khalifa family for its deadly repression.
“What is happening in Bahrain really are crimes against humanity ... what is happening is very dangerous, nobody is talking about these crimes,” Khansa was quoted saying.
She also lambasted western countries, particularly the US and Europen Union, for their ongoing silence on Bahrain.
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