BBC: A court in Bahrain has jailed 20 medics who treated protesters to up to 15 years, after convicting them of incitement to overthrow the regime.
In a separate case, the special security court sentenced a protester to death for killing a policeman.
The medics had been released on bail after many staged a hunger strike.
They treated people injured when a protest movement calling for more rights for the country's Shia majority in the Sunni-ruled kingdom was crushed.
Human rights activists say the sentences against the medics come as a surprise.
They had been cautiously hopeful that the medics' release on bail was a sign that the government was softening its approach.
The Bahraini doctors and nurses were sentenced to between five and 15 years in prison on charges that include possessing unlicensed arms, seizing medical equipment, and provoking sectarian hatred.
All worked in the Salmaniya Medical Complex in Manama, which security forces entered on 16 March after forcefully clearing the nearby Pearl Roundabout of demonstrators.
Human rights activists say they were only doing their duty. » | Thursday, September 29, 2011