
Bahrain is cracking down on dissent as it struggles with the political and economic impacts of the war.
On Monday, several people were arrested on charges of spying for Iran, adding to more than 200 detained since the conflict began, according to the UK-based Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy. At least one man, Mohamed Almosawi, has died in custody. Rights groups said his corpse showed signs consistent with torture; the government dismissed the allegations as “misleading.”
The government is wary of protests, haunted by memories of the 2011 Arab Spring pro-democracy movement and historic enmity with Iran tracing back to the kingdom’s founding and Tehran sponsoring a failed coup in Manama in 1981.
Bahrain has intercepted more than 650 Iranian missiles and drones since the start of the war on Feb. 28. Unlike its Gulf peers, the kingdom can’t afford the economic consequences: This week, Capital Intelligence Ratings lowered the country’s credit rating one notch, and expects the budget deficit to spike this year because of the cost of repairing damaged infrastructure.
latest_posts
- 1
1st results from Blue Ghost lunar lander reveal how much we still don't know about the moon - 2
FDA updates risk classification for voluntary shredded cheese recall - 3
Most normal matter in the universe isn't found in planets, stars or galaxies – an astronomer explains where it's distributed - 4
Human evolution’s biggest mystery has started to unravel. How 2025 tipped the scales - 5
Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS' journey through our solar system, in photos
We tasted one of the 10,000 Hershey's Dubai chocolate bars being resold on eBay. Is it worth the hype?
Police break up illegal chicken slaughter in Germany
Top 15 Supportable Design Brands Coming out on top
Insane Realities That Will Make You Reconsider How you might interpret History
Smuggler who called migrants 'chickens' jailed
Mississippi Insight for Jan. 11, 2026
Figure out how to Put resources into Lab Precious stones: A Novice's Aide
'People We Meet on Vacation' is the 1st of many Emily Henry adaptations: What other books turned movies to look forward to
The 15 Best Business visionaries Under 40












