A interview with Jasim by Dan Littauer Editor,
4.4.11
As the tiny Persian Gulf archipelago kingdom of Bahrain enters
its second month of widespread protests — with clashes on March
13 resulting in more than 1,000 being hospitalized and news that
the government has brought in troops from neighbouring Saudi
Arabia — a young gay Bahraini blogger offers insight into the
sources of discontent there as well as alternative visions the
demonstrators harbor.
In a series of email exchanges, Jasim (not his real name), a
24-year-old man who identifies as both Shi’a and gay, reflected
on the economic inequalities at the root of Bahraini discontent
— conditions that, fuelled as well by the events in Tunisia and
Egypt, have overwhelmed the traditional ruling elites’ effort to
divide the populace along Shi’a-Sunni lines.
“Shi’a, Sunni, Christian, Atheist, Jewish, White, Black, Arab,
Bedouin, Asian, Gay, Straight, etc... can all be loyal Bahrainis
who love and want the best for their country,” wrote Jasim, who,
significantly, named his blog loyalbahraini.wordpress.com.
His cohesive social vision is likely a response both to
Bahrain’s historical reality and to the efforts today to paint
the conflict as one between Muslim sects.
“Many people say as I and others are Shi’a-Muslim, our loyalty
is to Iran and not to our own country,” he wrote. “This makes me
sad and angry: just because I am a Shi’a, that doesn’t mean I am
related to any Iranian relations or come originally from Iran. I
am a Bahraini, no matter what my religious division, ethnicity
or sexuality is!”
In fact, until the late 18th century, Bahrain was a Persian
province, and its population remains predominantly Shi’a. At
that time, the British, looking to ensure their influence,
installed the Sunni Arab Al Khalifa family-tribe, who had lost
control of Qatar, as the nation’s rulers. For more than 200
years since, that non-Shi’a elite from outside Bahrain has ruled
a largely disenfranchised majority.
Though the British role in Bahrain ended in 1971, succeeded by a
constitutional monarchy, four years later, both the parliament
and the constitution were suspended, and an authoritarian royal
regime was established. The monarchy actively encouraged
immigration by Sunni Muslims from neighbouring Arab states to
dilute the power of the Shi’a majority. By the mid-1990s,
however, popular discontent among Shi’a and secular forces
spilled out into five years of often-violent protests.
King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa, the current monarch, sued for
peace after assuming the throne in 1999, with a National Charter
that ostensibly restored constitutional rule and gave women the
right to vote. However, only the parliament’s lower chamber,
with largely consultative powers, is elected by the people; the
king handpicks the members of the upper chamber. Significantly,
in 2002, a general amnesty was granted to government officials
previously accused of human rights abuses.
Today, Bahrain — which has huge strategic importance to the US
as home to the United States Naval Forces Central Command/ Fifth
Fleet — has a population of 1.2 million, less than half of whom
are Bahraini nationals, the rest being migrant workers, often
employed by the army and the police, many of them from South and
Southeast Asia. Despite a carefully cultivated image as
business-friendly open society, the 70 percent of citizens who
are Shi’a are barred from significant public sector, police, and
army posts and make up the poorest segment of society. The
military is largely composed of Sunni Muslims, with Bahrainis
commanding soldiers from Pakistan, Yemen, and Syria. While
public policies favor new immigrants, Shi’a Bahrainis often face
waiting lists of years for housing and wage competition from the
migrant labor force.
Jasim reflected on that recent history.
“I want to let everyone know that protests have been going
through the country concerning the ongoing inequality in the
country and the poor standard of living in many of the villages
in Bahrain, low salaries, and the discrimination against
Bahrain’s own loyal citizens,” he wrote. “Protests have been
undergoing since the 1980s, and such tragic events happened in
the 1990s, but... the media were neglecting this poor side of
Bahrain and were focusing on the posh, liberal, open to the
world side of it! The National Charter that promised Bahrainis
better living standards, decreasing the unemployment, a
democratic constitutional monarchy, was all a diplomatic
illusion to make the people shut up for a while.”
Jasim has been more fortunate than most Shi’a Bahrainis, having
the opportunity to go to school in Europe, where he was first
free to explore his sexuality. “I have lived all my life until I
was 18 without practicing any gay activities in the kingdom
(even though public school sex was quite popular since it was
all-boys schools) but I didn’t do anything,” he recalled.
“Although I knew I was gay from early adolescence, I just
concentrated on studying and was unaware about websites for gay
dating or anything... When I went to study in Europe, I started
exploring my sexuality through websites, where I chatted with
guys online, always careful about not being caught (and yes
being caught is a BIG concern for me since I come from a Middle
Eastern country).
After months of chatting with one man, they met for dinner and
in time Jasim had his first gay sexual experience.
“From there on I started to feel much more comfortable about
being gay and made a number of gay friends both in Europe and
throughout the Arab world,” he said. “Back in Bahrain, however,
I live a straight acting life here, where no one knows that I am
gay, except one friend (long story!), and I continue to be ‘straight
acting,’ doing my best to make up excuses when the pressure get
to me from family and society to have a family of my own.”
Jasim’s education in Europe and his ability to taste the openly
gay life of the West, however, did not blind him to the problems
in his homeland.
“Discrimination gives the message that the country DO NOT trust
the Shi’a, and it created a grudge between the Sunni and Shi’a,”
he wrote. “What made it worse is that they bring people from
outside the country and let them work in the army and the police
and give them nationalities, while the people are not allowed
just because of their Shi’a-Muslim origin!”
This disparate treatment, Jasim argues, does not emerge
organically in Bahraini society; rather, he says, it is imposed
by the government. “I have been raised since I was a kid that no
matter what division you are, what religion, it doesn’t matter
in life, all what matters is how good of a person you are to
yourself and to everyone else,” he wrote. “I have been raised in
a city that has a mixture of people from Shi’a, Sunni, and even
Christian backgrounds. So as a kid growing up, I didn’t feel
that sensitivity between Shi’a and Sunni...
“Mainly the discrimination happens in most of the public sector,
army, and any high ranks among the police. This strategy made by
the government, in my opinion, is the root for all this
sensitivity. If that strategy would not have been there in the
beginning, everyone will be like — Ah, Okay, I am a Bahraini
citizen first: and not a Shi'a or Sunni!’”
By instigating, promoting, and provoking a Sunni/ Shi’a divide,
the British Empire and later the Bahraini monarchy have asserted
dominance and prevented a strong civil society and more
egalitarian democratic state from emerging.
As Jasim explained, the events in Tunisia and Egypt dovetailed
serendipitously with a significant anniversary in Bahrain.
“After the events in Tunisia and Egypt, Bahraini people started
on Facebook and Twitter discussing what they have called the
14th of Feb revolution, and the reason they chose 14th of Feb it
was exactly a decade to the anniversary of The National Charter
that offered a lot and delivered little but a cosmetic change,”
he wrote.
In a statement posted online, Bahraini Youth for Freedom,
responsible for mobilizing demonstrations, urged Bahrainis “to
take to the streets on Monday 14 February in a peaceful and
orderly manner” and to forum a popular forum to “investigate and
hold to account economic, political and social violations,
including stolen public wealth, political naturalisation,
arrests, torture... [and] institutional and economic
corruption.”
Jasim was present in the first days of the protests.
“I participated in the first three days,” he wrote. “On the 14th
of February, there was a very small protest which grew bigger on
Tuesday in my town of Bilad Al-Qadeem. Both went smoothly — we
protested about the lack of rights of Bahraini people and ask
for better living standards, democratic representation, and a
call for a constitutional monarchy, to clean the corruption in
the government, and stop the political strategy of changing the
demography of the country... It was great to see that people
from both genders, all ages, backgrounds came to show their
support. We saw some reporters from CNN and BBC, but nothing
from Bahrain media, sadly.”

Elsewhere, however, on February the 14th, a young 21-year-old
Bahraini, Ali Abdul Hadi Mushaima, was shot dead. During his
funeral, the next day, police opened fire, killing one person
and injuring at least 25 others. The ensuing outrage led the
main opposition group, Al-Wefaq, to suspend its participation in
the parliament’s lower chamber.
Jasim offered his thoughts on the role of the opposition in the
popular uprising: “Even though Al-Wefaq has a strong support in
the Shi’a community in Bahrain, the protests have nothing to do
with them from the start and it simply demonstrates the people
frustration of being a second-class citizen... I, for example,
has never followed Al-Wefaq party ideas since it doesn’t match
my ideology.”
By the afternoon of February 14, thousands of protesters had
gained control of the Pearl Roundabout in the capital city of
Manama, establishing a tent city in emulation of Cairo’s Tahrir
Square. “As for Wednesday, protesters come from all over the
country, so the protest was considerably bigger,” Jasim wrote of
the protest in the capital the following day. “If protests
continued mostly in the villages, no one will even bother to go
and check it out or give it any attention as was the case often
in the past, especially during the ‘90s...
“My cousin and I went on Wednesday afternoon with signs of ‚ÄòNo
Sunni, No Shi’a, We are Bahraini and we want to be treated as
Bahrainis.’ Lots of media coverage from media centres OUTSIDE
the country, but once again Bahrain TV and the main government
media showed nothing, and didn’t report what’s going on there.
“The atmosphere there was very engaging and people were
demonstrating that they want urgent actions from the government
to start giving people their right, it was all peaceful, and was
kinda a social thing, people chatting, and showing their
support. We stayed for two hours, and it was very interesting as
I have met many of my school friends.”
Jasim and his cousin were fortunate they chose not to stay in
the roundabout overnight; at about 3 a.m. on February 17, riot
police moved in, using tear gas, batons, and shotguns to
disperse the protesters, many of whom were fast asleep. Five
people died, including a two-year-old girl shot multiple times
by police, while 231 sustained injuries and roughly 70 people
were arrested.
“One of the victims was an old school friend who was a second
year civil engineer student in the University of Bahrain,” Jasim
wrote. “Ali was such a lovely, sweet, smart guy with such a
positive spirit — everyone loved him. When I heard on Thursday
that Ali is in the hospital after being gunned down by a shotgun
in his thighs and the penis I WAS SHOCKED.”
After another bloody day on February 18, the army temporarily
retreated, protesters returned to the Pearl Roundabout, and by
February 22, a Martyrs March drew a crowd of 280,000 — a number
representing more than 20 percent of all residents or one out of
two Bahraini citizens. Since then, scrambled efforts at
accommodation on the king’s part — the slashing of housing costs
by 25 percent, a reshuffling of his cabinet — have failed to
satisfy the opposition, and the protests continue.
What does Jasim himself hope will come of the protests?
“Equality, less corruption in the ministries (as I don’t believe
that any government can be 100 percent free of corruption), a
constitution that gives the people the right to help construct
the country, stopping the political strategy of bringing people
from outside and let them in the army while the Bahrainis cannot
be in it,” he responded.
Saudis often call Bahrain “the bar,” because it’s the place they
can easily reach and buy alcohol, meet people more freely, and
indulge in the delights of prostitution — both male and female.
Every weekend for more than two decades, thousands of Saudis
have driven across the 15-mile-long causeway linking Bahrain’s
main island to the Saudi mainland to enjoy the relative liberal
atmosphere.
How do Bahraini gays fare in this climate, I ask Jasim.
“Bahrain is indeed a very liberal country comparing to the other
gulf countries, and even tolerates prostitution as long as it is
kept quiet and invisible,” he responded. “Towards homosexuality
there is a kind of strange denial, in some places like Thai
massage centres, its well known in the country that many gay
guys go there for pleasure and such places remain open. So at
some points, it seems everyone is giving the blind eye and
ignoring that it exists, and other times they try to stop it !”
But really living as a gay man is impossible in Bahrain, as the
recent trial of 52 men, out of a larger number arrested at a
purportedly gay party in Bahrain’s second city, Muharaq — on
charges of promoting immorality, debauchery, and prostitution —
makes clear. Opposition Al-Wefaq members of the parliament’s
lower house, in fact, raised questions about the “spread” of
such “vice” with the king’s cabinet.
“It will be a long process till Bahrain can recognize any gay
and lesbians rights,” Jasim wrote of the limits of his hopes for
change in the short run. “I write this filled with sadness,
really, as I don’t know how can you change this. Maybe we have
to move slowly to a more civil society and openness before this
issue can be addressed gradually. Perhaps a new constitution, if
our demands are met, can at least remove the references to
immorality and other clauses used against us... I also believe
in the power of media, that can at least gives the young
generation hope that they are not alone.
While the media has been focusing on Libya and to a lesser
extent Syria, we hear little about Bahrain in the West. Has the
government’s strategy changed or intensified in any way in
during the month of March?
“The situation in Bahrain has gone from bad to worse !! Once the
government noticed that the protestors are demanding their
rights and won’t stop until they get what they deserve ( a
constitutional monarchy, fair treatment to all the people
especially regarding joining the army and the police forces,
better infrastructure to the villages in the kingdom, etc etc )
the government chose to shut the people and create tensions
between the Sunni and Shi’a, and portraying the latter as having
loyalty to Iran, and that they only want to following in the
Iranian Islamic revolution steps !! This excuse is the
illusionary card that the whole region uses whenever they feel
that the people wants their rights and sick of being ruled by
one family for nearly 50 years now !!
The strategy of Bahrain and other Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)
countries are playing is to make everyone believe that all those
governments are doing, is protecting the country from the Shia
!! Forgetting that the Shia have actually been in Bahrain the
longest since the transformation from Delmon and Taylus
civilizations, Arbian gulf, to Bahrain !!! The protests started
and finished with people holding the flag of Bahrain, screaming
" No shia, No sunni, we are Bahraini want our rights ",
demanding a constitutional monarchy, better living, and an end
to corruption in the government. And not a single word or flag
of Iran !! So simply how can a whole nation speak and accuse the
shia of this while they can see that none of those lies are
happening !!”
Jasim is scathing about the intervention of Saudi Arabia, and
other Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries. He also
illuminates other tactics being adopted by the Bahraini
government:
“Since Saudi Arabia are great allays with the Al-khalifa
family, two weeks ago, invited troops from other GCC countries
(mainly Saudi ) to force the people stop protesting ( Such
democracy we have it seems !! ) Many people got injured, and the
government played this scenario where they actually took the
injured people from the main hospital Salminya to the military
hospital in Awali !! So they can "SHOW" the media that there
are no injured from the evacuation of the protestors and no one
is in the main hospital Salminya !! Since then the government
had a curfew in most of the country (mostly villages) where
protestors live, that no one can go out from 6 pm until 5am in
the morning !! All over Bahrain there are now LOTS of inspection
points, loads of people got arrested, personally I know many
people got arrested from my friend's families. And sadly the
government was able to incite a sectarian grudge between Shi’a
and Sunni partly by using the media in Bahrain (the ones
controlled by the government to divert the people eyes from the
truth and let them believe its all about Shi’a disloyalty in the
country).

The situation has been pretty bad: many people got fired from
their jobs, lots of arrested people, my family has been stuck
inside the house afraid that if they go out they will be
attacked and abused just because of their religious background;
I simply cannot express how I feel.”
“What about the west”, I ask Jasim, “what do you make of its
silence on the matter?”
“I believe its quite clear why the West is reluctant to get
involved with the situation in Bahrain. Simply because the
monsters we have in Bahrain ruling the country, are the West’s
best friends, with all the benefits and good relationships the
Khalifa family have to the West. So it has no reason to
intervene and destroy their relationship. First they won’t
intervene for the sake of the protestors, as the benefits are
already been provided to them by Al-khalifa family and the
business in the country. And of course they are not stupid to
commit a political suicide and gives the Bahraini government
worldwide support to kill and use force to shut the protestors
up !! As the world has already seen , with the fast growing and
open technology communication we have here through unbiased
channels and social network sites, that the protestors happened
because of the unfairness in this country. So the west are
playing the neutral position where they won’t show support
publicly to any side !!”
So now the Bahraini government shut the only Independent paper
down, what is going on?
“Al-wasat newspaper was constructed by one of the active
politicians in the country, Mansour Al-Jamri, and since then it
has been reporting fair articles about the life and society in
Bahrain without the government’s intervention to twist the
truth. When the protests happened, the newspaper was delivering
the actual truth of what was going on, the people's demands, and
what actually the government did to those protestors !! So the
government then accused the newspaper of allegedly fabricating
lies. Sadly, the Bahrain national channel BTV, Al-ayam and
Akhbar Alkhaleej newspapers are biased newspapers under the
control/influence of the government, where they are simply doing
what the government tell them to do, no matter what the truth
is. For the people of Bahrain, everyone lost faith in such media
channels as everyone knew they are twisting the truth and not
reporting honestly of what’s going on !!”
I ask Jasim if he thinks the Bahraini government will be able to
hold off the revolution.
“Bahrain was able to hold off the revolution three times
before, 80s twice, and in the 1990's. Lots of sacrifices and no
intervention or help from the outside, the situation looks like it
will be repeated just like the unfortunate events in the 1984,
1989 and the 1994.”