Bahrain
Protests
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| Mr Rajab has attracted support from many in Bahrain's protest movement |
Prominent
Bahraini human rights activist Nabeel Rajab has been jailed for three years for
taking part in "illegal gatherings".
He is
already serving a three-month sentence he received in July over comments on
social networking websites.
Mr Rajab,
president of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, had previously been detained
several times.
He was one
of the organisers of pro-democracy protests which have rocked the Gulf kingdom
since last February.
Mr Rajab's
lawyer Mohammed al-Jishi said three year-long sentences had been handed down on
three separate counts.
Mr Jishi
said he plans to appeal against the ruling.
Fellow
activists immediately condemned the decision, with some members of the protest
movement calling for demonstrations on Thursday evening.
Mr Rajab's
sentence in July came after prosecutors received complaints that he had
libelled residents of the town of Muharraq on Twitter.
He wrote on
Twitter, where he has more than 155,000 followers, that Prime Minister Sheikh
Khalifa bin Salman al-Khalifa should step down, and that Muharraq residents had
only welcomed him during a visit because he had offered them subsidies.
Last week,
several members of the US Congress wrote to the Bahraini King Hamad al-Khalifa
expressing concern over Mr Rajab's case and urging the release of
"Bahrainis being held for crimes related to freedom of expression".

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