Bahrain's most wanted: Jailbreak fugitives named by authorities

Bahrain's most wanted: Jailbreak fugitives named by authorities
Ten inmates are on the run after a terror cell attacked Jaw Prison in Bahrain on Sunday, killing a policeman. The prison holds those convicted following anti-government protests.
2 min read
02 January, 2017
Ten inmates are on the run in Bahrain [AFP]

Bahraini authorities have named the 10 inmates on the run following an armed attack on a prison which killed one policeman and wounded another.

The state's interior ministry said security forces have launched a manhunt for the attackers and the escapees who fled Jaw prison, south of capital Manama, where Shia activists convicted over anti-government protests are held.

Seven had been serving life sentences and three were serving lengthy jail terms for "terrorist acts", the ministry added.

The ministry identified the fugitives as:

Ahmad Mohammad Saleh Mohammad Al Shaikh, 26
Sentence: 73 years

Ammar Abdullah Eisa Abdul Hussain, 28
Sentence: Life and two years

Mohammad Ebrahim Mulla Radhi Al Tooq, 26
Sentence: 28 years

Hassan Abdullah Eisa Abdul Hussain, 24
Sentence: Life

Eisa Musa Abdullah Hassan, 24
Sentence: Life

Hussain Atiyah Mohammad Saleh, 37
Sentence: Life

Sadiq Jafar Salman Hussain, 27
Sentence: Life and 41 years

Abdul Hussain Juma Hassan Ahmad Al Onaisi, 31
Sentence: Life

Reda Abdullah Eisa Al Ghasra, 29
Sentence: Life and 79 years

Hussain Jassim Eisa Jassim Al Bana, 27
Sentence: 43 years

It added the attackers were a terrorist cell armed with automatic rifles and pistols.

A committee is being formed to investigate the circumstances of the jailbreak, the statement said.

The Gulf state has been rocked by unrest since its Sunni authorities crushed Shia led protests in 2011 demanding a constitutional monarchy and an elected prime minister.

Hundreds of people have been arrested and many have faced trials over their role in the demonstrations.

International rights groups have condemned this action, as well as the treatment of prisoners at Jaw.

A report published by the Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy [BIRD] in 2015 detailed a number of allegations against the prison's authorities, inclusing humiliation of prisoners, forced sleep depravation, food depravation, physical abuse and forced disappearances.

Police on Sunday set up or reinforced roadblocks near Shia villages outside the capital, witnesses said.

Despite the crackdown, protesters have frequently clashed with security forces in these villages.

In June, 17 prisoners broke out of a prison on the island of Muharraq causing security forces to launch a manhunt for the fugitives.

Agencies contributed to this report.