Defenders / Bahrain / Mohammed Ramadan Case № HM-BH-2014-001
Defender · Bahrain

MOHAMMED
RAMADAN

Mohammed Ramadan was sentenced to death in Bahrain in connection with a 2014 bombing in Al-Dair. His case has raised serious concerns about due process, allegations of torture during interrogation, and the fairness of capital proceedings in the kingdom.

Sentenced Bahrain
Country
Bahrain
Arrested
1 Feb 2014
Sentence
Death sentence.
HM-BH-2014-001
Portrait on file Verified
Our Record · Detention

Imprisoned for
Four thousand five hundred+ days.

0.+1

Days in detention since arrest on 1 February 2014. Counter live · updates daily at 00:00 UTC

Detention timeline · arrest → todayCounter live
1 Feb 2014Arrest in Al-Dair bombing case
1 Dec 2014Sentenced to death
1 Jun 2015Appeal proceedings
6 Jun 2026Today
Case events · 3 on file
  1. Arrest

    Arrest in Al-Dair bombing case

    Mohammed Ramadan was arrested by Bahraini security forces in connection with a bombing in Al-Dair that killed a police officer.

  2. Verdict

    Sentenced to death

    Ramadan was convicted of participating in the Al-Dair bombing and sentenced to death by a Bahraini court.

  3. Hearing

    Appeal proceedings

    Ramadan's case entered the appeals process, with legal proceedings continuing over subsequent years.

DocumentedViolations
Arbitrary detention Denial of legal counsel Prolonged pretrial detention Torture Unfair trial
Verified · 11 May 2026HuMENA Editorial
Approved
§ 01 · The case

The arrest, and what followed.

Background and Arrest

Mohammed Ramadan was arrested in February 2014 in connection with a bombing in the village of Al-Dair, Bahrain. The attack had resulted in the death of a police officer, and authorities moved swiftly to detain suspects. Ramadan was taken into custody and held on charges of participating in the bomb attack.

Legal Proceedings and Death Sentence

Ramadan was prosecuted in Bahrain's criminal courts on terrorism-related charges. The indictment centered on allegations that he had participated in the planning or execution of the Al-Dair bombing. He was convicted and sentenced to death, joining a small number of prisoners on death row in the kingdom.

The legal process in his case has been marked by concerns typical of capital prosecutions in Bahrain. Defendants in national security cases often face prolonged pretrial detention, limited access to legal counsel during interrogation, and allegations that confessions were obtained under duress. The specialized criminal courts that hear terrorism cases operate under procedures that differ from civilian criminal trials, raising questions about the adequacy of due process protections.

Detention Conditions and Status

Since his conviction, Ramadan has remained in detention in Bahrain awaiting the outcome of any appeals or further legal proceedings. Conditions in Bahraini prisons have been the subject of sustained criticism from human rights organizations, particularly for prisoners convicted on national security charges. Access to medical care, family visits, and legal counsel has been reported as inconsistent.

International Context

Bahrain resumed executions in 2017 after a de facto moratorium that had lasted nearly a decade. The shift alarmed human rights defenders and prompted renewed scrutiny of death penalty cases in the kingdom. Ramadan's case is one of several capital convictions that have drawn international attention for alleged due process violations, including claims of torture, coerced confessions, and the use of evidence obtained without adequate legal safeguards.

The use of the death penalty in Bahrain has been condemned by international human rights organizations and United Nations special procedures. Calls for retrials, commutations, or clemency in death penalty cases have been a consistent feature of advocacy around prisoners like Ramadan, whose convictions rest on contested evidence and allegations of serious procedural flaws.

Sources on file with HuMENA EditorialReading time · 6 minutes

Mohammed Ramadan remains on death row in Bahrain, his conviction marred by allegations of torture and due process violations that have drawn sustained international concern.
HuMENA Editorial · 2026
Editorial · Provenance

Compiled by HuMENA's Bahrain research team from primary documentation, public filings, family-supplied legal documents, and confidential partner reporting. Editorial responsibility: HuMENA Editorial Board.

HuMENA Editorial Retrieved · 2026-05-11
Editorial sign-off · pending review
First published · 12 May 2026  ·  Last verified · 11 May 2026 Take-down requests · takedowns@humena.org
2014 → 2026 · 13 calendar years of detention