(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - Ahmed Mansour Al Nahham (5-year-old) has had his left eye surgically eviscerated as it had been fired at by regime forces during attacks on his village, Dair. The forces indiscriminately use these firearms against citizens without any supervision nor responsibility.
Al Nahham's injured eye has been eviscerated in a hospital in Singapore. He suffered from the injury for months, his family searched for suitable treatment to rescue his injured eye. A few birdshot pellets were previously taken out, in long medical treatment journey. Yet, he is subjected to an extensive therapy for a prosthetic eye fixation, in replace of the eviscerated eye.
Ophthalmologists alerted that his healthy right eye my get gradually side-effected, which made taking him abroad for better treatment a must.
In the mean time, the regime didn't say a word about this inhumane crime perpetrated by its forces, and has not taken responsibility of the child's medical treatment.
Al Nahham was shot by regime forces' firearms while a brutal crackdown against peaceful protesters on Wednesday 13th June 2012 in his village, Dair, north of Muharraq island. It was part of the collective punishment policy adopted by the regime forces who carried him directly after he got shot, providing no further information at that time. Some amateur footages showed him carried in their hands.
Incident details explained how Al Nahham's father was, as usual, selling fish, sitting on the sidewalk and his son Ahmed came to ask for some money for him and his brothers to buy some sweets. Suddenly, a group of regime forces headed to them and one policeman was pointing his weapon toward the child. Al Nahham's father felt the danger and shouted, "Stop this, this is a child, this is a child". But, nobody responded to the father, despite his louder and louder screams. The response was merely more fire. "I said he is a child, don't you understand?", the father shouted the loudest he could. Here, they shot at Ahmed's eye. Hostilely, they continued the cold-bloodedly shooting and fired at his father with 78 pellets riddled all of his body.
"The 5-year-old child injury with the birdshot (Fissile Bullets) highlights the urgent need to hold those accepting such crimes accountable, and draws a big question mark about the legality and legitimacy of this internationally-prohibited usage", Al Wefaq Liberties and Human Right Department, head, S. Hadi Mosawi said.
He added "The systematic misuse of weapons is widely spread among the security forces in Bahrain. Many concerned human right organizations expressed their worry about this. The weapons lead to death due to the misuse in an excessive manner. Teargas grenades caused death cases. Shotguns, which are originally used for hunting birds, caused many deaths, hundreds of casualties, many lost their eyes and many others were left with permanent disabilities and impairments".
Al Nahham's injured eye has been eviscerated in a hospital in Singapore. He suffered from the injury for months, his family searched for suitable treatment to rescue his injured eye. A few birdshot pellets were previously taken out, in long medical treatment journey. Yet, he is subjected to an extensive therapy for a prosthetic eye fixation, in replace of the eviscerated eye.
Ophthalmologists alerted that his healthy right eye my get gradually side-effected, which made taking him abroad for better treatment a must.
In the mean time, the regime didn't say a word about this inhumane crime perpetrated by its forces, and has not taken responsibility of the child's medical treatment.
Al Nahham was shot by regime forces' firearms while a brutal crackdown against peaceful protesters on Wednesday 13th June 2012 in his village, Dair, north of Muharraq island. It was part of the collective punishment policy adopted by the regime forces who carried him directly after he got shot, providing no further information at that time. Some amateur footages showed him carried in their hands.
Incident details explained how Al Nahham's father was, as usual, selling fish, sitting on the sidewalk and his son Ahmed came to ask for some money for him and his brothers to buy some sweets. Suddenly, a group of regime forces headed to them and one policeman was pointing his weapon toward the child. Al Nahham's father felt the danger and shouted, "Stop this, this is a child, this is a child". But, nobody responded to the father, despite his louder and louder screams. The response was merely more fire. "I said he is a child, don't you understand?", the father shouted the loudest he could. Here, they shot at Ahmed's eye. Hostilely, they continued the cold-bloodedly shooting and fired at his father with 78 pellets riddled all of his body.
"The 5-year-old child injury with the birdshot (Fissile Bullets) highlights the urgent need to hold those accepting such crimes accountable, and draws a big question mark about the legality and legitimacy of this internationally-prohibited usage", Al Wefaq Liberties and Human Right Department, head, S. Hadi Mosawi said.
He added "The systematic misuse of weapons is widely spread among the security forces in Bahrain. Many concerned human right organizations expressed their worry about this. The weapons lead to death due to the misuse in an excessive manner. Teargas grenades caused death cases. Shotguns, which are originally used for hunting birds, caused many deaths, hundreds of casualties, many lost their eyes and many others were left with permanent disabilities and impairments".
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