Bahrain dictatorship bribes British military


The Royal Military Academy in Sandhurst. Photograph: Frank Baron for the Guardian

By Simon Murphy and Martin Williams in Britain:

Sandhurst took £3m Bahrain gift after regime’s crackdown

September 2nd, 2012

Britain’s world-famous officer training school, Sandhurst, has accepted a £3m donation from the King of Bahrain, despite global criticism of the regime following a brutal crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators last year.

Documents obtained by the Bureau reveal the top military training establishment was in negotiations with the regime about the donation throughout 2011. It received the money in January 2012 and sent a gushing letter thanking the King of Bahrain for his generosity at the beginning of summer.

The academy, which is responsible for training British Army officers, is using the donation to build a sports hall which is due to open early next year. It will be named in the country’s honour.

The donation is part of a long-standing relationship between the Bahraini royal family and Sandhurst. The King, Hamad bin Essa Al Khalifa, was trained at the Surrey-based academy, as are a select group of Bahraini military personnel each year.

The King has also been a patron of the Sandhurst Foundation, the academy’s alumni charity, since 2007. He twice donated a fee of £69,975 to the Foundation in 2011 and 2012.

The Sunni regime, which rules over the Shia majority, was criticised after the Saudi National Guard were deployed to crush pro-democracy protests that started in February 2011, sparked by the Arab Spring movement. Hospital staff were arrested for helping protestors and many are still on trial.

Jeremy Corbyn MP condemned the decision to accept the donations.

‘Bahrain has an appalling human rights record and even now medical practitioners are on trial for helping victims,’ he said.

‘It is disgraceful that the British government should allow the King of Bahrain to fund Sandhurst and it seems there is a completely different set of standards on human rights relating to Bahrain, compared to many other states in the Gulf and Middle East region.’

Not that many other states, I would say. The British government applies basically the same, let us say “extremely charitable”, human rights standards to Saudi Arabia, Oman, Qatar, etc. as it does to Bahrain.

The standards suddenly become a lot stricter on the Iranian side of the Gulf. And, elsewhere in the Middle East, in Syria.

The MoD has provided training for 77 Bahraini military personnel at Sandhurst since 1992, including three last year, and 39 in the past decade, according to a response to a Freedom of Information request.

An MoD spokesman told the Bureau that although the training costs the government £78,000 per recruit, Bahrain only pays £48,400, meaning the government subsidises training costs to the tune of £29,600 in each case. Figures suggest this will have cost the MoD £384,800 in the past three years alone.

An MoD spokesman argued that the subsidies were beneficial to Britain as they ‘help them [Bahraini military personnel] see how we do things,’ – a practice dating back to 1947.

The recruits undergo a 48-week Army Commissioning Course, which the MoD says gives ‘a grounding in British Military doctrine’ and teaches ‘to think and communicate as commanders and to foster a deep interest and care for the individual’.

Bahrain sports hall

In the correspondence obtained by the Bureau, Major General Patrick Marriott, a trustee of the Sandhurst Foundation, thanked the Bahraini monarch. ‘His Majesty’s very generous donation to the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst has been received and with much gratitude. I would be most grateful if you would please convey my humble duty and my sincerest thanks to His Majesty for providing these funds for supporting the development of a modern multi purpose Sports Hall,’ he wrote on May 24, 2012.

The letter, addressed to the King of Bahrain’s second son, Sheikh Abdullah bin Hamad bin Essa Al Khalifa, who is Chief of the Royal Court, explains that building work is due to ‘commence imminently and if it pleases your Excellency, I will keep you updated on a regular basis’.

The donation, which was received on January 18, 2012, had initially been offered more than a year previously.

In a letter dated February 1, 2011 addressed to Major General Marriott, the Sheikh confirmed the £3m donation, after an initial £100,000 for design work, asking for ‘the cash flow for the remaining balance’.

Just 14 days later violence broke out in Bahrain’s capital, Manama, as 14 protesters were injured and one killed by government security forces, who used tear gas and rubber bullets to break up demonstrations.

The protests continued into March, with Saudi Arabia controversially deploying 1,000 troops to quell them. Up to 50 people have reportedly been killed to date during protests.

Sandhurst did not immediately reply to the Sheikh’s request for instructions on where to deposit the remaining funds. On October 1, 2011 – more than eight months later – the Sheikh wrote to Major General Marriott expressing concern ‘that we have not as yet received a reply’ to the previous letter.

Major General Marriott finally responded on November 8, 2011, writing: ‘Please accept my sincerest apologies for not replying to your previous letter. I was waiting for clarification on the total costs of the project.’ He included the bank details for the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst in the letter, asking the Sheikh to pay the remaining balance, noting that the anticipated completion date would be December 2012.

However, in later correspondence, Major General Marriott moved the initial completion date back to March 2013. He also added: ‘With regards to signage; my team is working with the architects to design a suitable commemorative plaque which meets the needs of the Royal Military Academy and His Majesty.’

When asked whether Major General Marriott’s delay in response to the Sheikh was because of turmoil inside Bahrain, an MoD spokesman said it was not, reiterating the Major General’s claim about waiting for clarification on the project’s total costs.

A ‘significant’ donation

Andy Slaughter MP, chair of the all-party parliamentary group for Bahrain, said it was ‘significant’ that the £3m donation was to Sandhurst itself, rather than its charitable wing, the Sandhurst Foundation.

‘The government’s response on questioning has been almost entirely uncritical of what Bahrain is doing. For a country the size of Bahrain [the island’s population is 1.3m], which is very small indeed, the number of deaths, injured and those imprisoned, victimised and dismissed is highly significant.

‘The point is, they haven’t really done anything about it. It’s all PR, about presenting an acceptable face.’

Close ties

An MoD spokesman explained that the British military has a long tradition of ‘integrating overseas personnel who have been selected for officer training and we have no wish to discontinue this practice.’

Ties that bind

The King of Bahrain’s £3m donation to Sandhurst is part of a longstanding ‘relationship of patronage and favours’, according to a leading academic who fled the country during the uprising.

Professor Mike Diboll, who now works at the University of Sussex, worked in Bahrain for four years until the violence broke out.

‘This is about retaining that reciprocal favours relationship between the Bahraini monarchy and strains within the British establishment,’ he said.

Although Britain recognised the independence of Bahrain in 1913, it remained under British administration until full independence was declared in 1971.

Dr Kristian Coates-Ulrichsen, a research fellow specialising in the Gulf states, at the London School of Economics and Political Science said he found the donation to Sandhurst ‘astonishing’.

‘The stuff that’s happened over the past 18 months should have persuaded everyone in the UK government and armed forces that the credibility of the Bahraini government’s claims to be reforming is, pretty much, zero,’ he said.

‘The leader of the opposition, who I met recently, was shot at in June – he was targeted deliberately. We’ve had people being continually arrested, we’ve had the closure of another political party and this is on-going.’

But he said the Bahrain’s relationship with Sandhurst ‘fits into a much wider pattern of British officers providing the backbone of Bahrain’s security forces.’

17 thoughts on “Bahrain dictatorship bribes British military

  1. Pingback: Thai women’s escape from Bahraini forced prostitution | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  2. Bahrain court upholds jail for 13 opposition figures

    (AFP) – 4 hours ago

    DUBAI — A Bahrain court on Tuesday upheld jail terms against 13 leading opposition figures, including seven facing life in prison, over charges of plotting to overthrow the Gulf monarchy, lawyers said.

    The opposition swiftly condemned the “vindictive” rulings and accused the court of staging “mock trials,” while London-based Amnesty International called for the defendants to be quickly released as the verdicts were “outrageous.”

    The defendants who played leading roles in month-long protests last year demanding democratic reforms did not turn up in the appeals court, the lawyers said.

    The 13 activists were being retried in a civil court after they were convicted by a special semi-military court, along with seven others who remain at large, of plotting to topple the Sunni ruling family.

    Another defendant was acquitted.

    The prosecution had dropped charges against all defendants “related to the freedom of expression” which were considered illegal by the National Safety Court that was set up to try people who took part in the uprising.

    Among those sentenced is activist Abdulhadi Khawaja who ended in June a 110-day hunger strike.

    Also sentenced were Hasan Musheime and Abdel Jalil al-Sankis, both leaders of the banned Shiite movement, Haq, as well as Sunni leftist Ibrahim Sharif, who heads the secular Waed group.

    “Today’s ruling is a clear proof of the fake justice in Bahrain,” said the main opposition groups in a statement.

    “Those are politically motivated verdicts that have no judicial value, because they have been based on a vindictive methodology,” they said.

    “There is no state in Bahrain. It is a tyrannical authority, and an oppressive government that tries to look like a (political) system while hiding security apparatuses that terrorise the people to silence its demands for democracy.”

    The main Shiite formation, Al-Wefaq, said it was a “black day for justice in Bahrain.”

    “Those wrongful rulings will only strengthen the determination of the people to continue their revolution to the end,” the group’s leader, Ali Salman, wrote on his Twitter page.

    Amnesty too lashed out at the verdicts, saying they must be “overturned and the activists immediately and unconditionally released.”

    “Today’s court decision is another blow to justice and it shows once more that the Bahraini authorities are not on the path of reform but seem rather driven by vindictiveness”, said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, deputy director of Amnesty’s Middle East and North Africa Programme.

    Sahraoui said Bahrain’s human rights record will be up for scrutiny at the UN Human Rights Council in September.

    “Bahrain cannot get a free pass at the UN Human Rights Council and we urge states to tell the Bahraini authorities that today’s verdict crosses a red line and that they can no longer be considered credible partners,” said Sahraoui.

    In June last year, the specially formed tribunal handed down lengthy jail terms against the 21 mostly Shiite activists after convicting them of plotting to overthrow the regime.

    Ten months later, Bahrain’s highest appeals court ordered a retrial.

    Bahrain came under strong criticism from international human rights organisations over last year’s crackdown on the Shiite-led protests.

    An international panel commissioned by King Hamad to probe the government’s clampdown found out that excessive force and torture had been used against protesters and detainees.

    The Sunni-ruled kingdom, home to the US Fifth Fleet and strategically situated across the Gulf from Iran, has continued to witness sporadic Shiite-led demonstrations, mostly outside the capital, since it crushed the protest movement in March last year.

    Copyright © 2012 AFP. All rights reserved

    Like

  3. Pingback: Free Bahrain political prisoners, Amnesty says | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  4. Pingback: CNN self-censorship on Bahrain dictatorship | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  5. Pingback: CNN’s links to Kazakhstan, Bahrain dictatorships | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  6. Pingback: Bahrain dictatorship’s British allies | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  7. Pingback: Bahrain and Britain | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  8. Pingback: British mercenaries in the Middle East | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  9. Pingback: Bahrain dictatorship twists even British accomplices’ words | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  10. Pingback: Bahrain dictatorship paying Kim Kardashian? | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  11. Pingback: Bahrain regime tries Christmas bribe of British MP | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  12. Pingback: Leeds United, from football to Bahrain dictatorship propaganda | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  13. Pingback: Bahrain dictatorship and British BP oil | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  14. Pingback: French author Guy de Maupassant on war | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  15. Pingback: British army insults fallen soldiers for Bahrain dictatorship’s bribe | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  16. Pingback: Sandhurst, British academy for Arabian princely military dictators | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  17. Pingback: British military collaboration with torturing Bahrain dictatorship | Dear Kitty. Some blog

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.