"This week, I expect to hear if I will be going to prison for 15 years. The
verdict on my appeal, as well as those of 19 other medics convicted in a sham
Bahraini military trial last year, is due on Thursday. The Bahraini regime
targeted us for treating protesters who were injured in democracy protests. I
lived and worked in the United States for many years, some spent studying at
Widener University in Chester. It's where I learned to volunteer, and last year,
when demonstrations erupted in Bahrain, that's what I did. Salmaniya Medical
Complex, the country's main public hospital, was overwhelmed by protesters hurt
by regime forces, so I went to the emergency room to help treat them. Several
weeks later, on entering a government office, I was blindfolded and handcuffed.
Over five months of detention, I was beaten, electrocuted, and sexually
harassed. Then I was convicted. All just for doing my job."