Akhbar al-Khaleej newspaper said Parliament issued an open invitation to United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Raad al-Hussein to visit “amidst claims he issued recently about human rights violations.” “MPs … asserted that there will be no restrictions on his movements and he will be allowed to visit any place, village or prison,” the newspaper said.
In Geneva, Mohammad Alnsour, chief of the Middle East and North Africa section of the U.N. human rights office, told Reuters that a technical mission which he headed in February last year was unable to visit detention centers.
He said Zeid welcomed the invitation, but it would have to tackle human rights and could not be mere “a photo opportunity.”
Bahrain’s majority Shiites demonstrated in 2011 demanding a bigger share in government. The country has drawn criticism over its response to the protests, including allegations of torture. Authorities have banned the main Shiite group, launched legal proceedings to ban another secular group, detained activists and revoked the citizenship of the spiritual leader of the country’s Shiites.
Alnsour said the council had many concerns in Bahrain. “Our major concern is we have allegations of torture … shrinking of democratic space for political activists and political societies [parties] in the country,” he said.
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