"Joseph Stalin introduced "the show trial" - secretive military tribunals that  bypass the judiciary - during the Great Purge of the 1930s. It appears that  Bahrain has taken a chapter straight out of Stalin's textbook, in which verdicts  are predetermined and then justified through the use of coerced confessions,  obtained through torture and threats against defendents' families. The only new  addition to this chapter is that the government of Bahrain has insisted, since  the 1980s, on airing these filmed confessions on state TV - often with the  defendant apologising to the king. Ayat al Qurmuzi, a poet sentenced to one  year's imprisonment for reading a poem critical of the king, had one such  confession aired, possibly to pave the way for some kind of royal pardon.   Credible reports from now-free detainees who were held with Ayat have said  how a toilet brush was forced into her mouth. All those on trial are "traitors  to the state", says the relentless propaganda of hate speech, spewed on state  media - a chapter in the Arab Tyrant's manual that could have been written by  Goebbels. The media has described protestors as "termites" and Shia as "the evil  group"; they have dehumanised "the other", who deserve treatment worse than  animals.   Since March, hundreds have shared a similar experience to mine. There are  several stages to the ordeal that are particularly distressing for all involved.  The first stage is the sudden arrest, in a dawn raid or at a checkpoint, or in  some cases, at work, and then they are taken away to an unknown location by  unknown forces and for long periods of time. In Ghazi's case, 48 days." (thanks Matthew)