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4 American Journalists Are Released After Arrest In Bahrain

Bahraini protesters take part in a demonstration to mark the fifth anniversary of the country's Arab Spring-inspired uprising this past weekend. American journalists who were at one of the demonstrations were arrested.
Mohammed Al-Shaikh
/
AFP/Getty Images
Bahraini protesters take part in a demonstration to mark the fifth anniversary of the country's Arab Spring-inspired uprising this past weekend. American journalists who were at one of the demonstrations were arrested.

Two days after they were arrested at a demonstration marking the fifth anniversary of an Arab Spring-inspired uprising in Bahrain, four Americans have now been released. They are accused of illegal assembly and intent to commit a crime.

Bahraini officials say the four entered the country illegally — evidently by identifying themselves as tourists instead of journalists — and then took part "in an unlawful gathering."

One of the Americans who was detained is Anna Therese Day, according to CNN, which says Day has done freelance work for the network and other news outlets.

Providing new details, Bahrain's Police Media Center says the arrests began when police detained a masked man who was near "rioting and vandalism" in an area where security forces were also being attacked.

That led police to question the three other Americans, who were nearby — and police determined that they had been "carrying out media activities without receiving the permit from the competent authorities," as Gulf News reports.

A prosecutor in Bahrain issued a statement Tuesday saying the four "were released on Tuesday afternoon," The Associated Press reports, adding, "It wasn't immediately clear if they could leave the island nation off the coast of Saudi Arabia."

We'll remind you that despite posing a serious threat, Bahrain's uprising did not overthrow the country's monarchy. As NPR's Kelly McEvers reported in 2012, "pro-government thugs attacked protesters, and protesters fought back. Just one month into the uprising, Bahrain's ruling family authorized some 1,500 troops from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to enter the country."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Bill Chappell is a writer and editor on the News Desk in the heart of NPR's newsroom in Washington, D.C.
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