Bahrain’s government has revoked the nationality of 69 people, including infants, according to reports by Human Rights Watch and the Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD). The groups say 33 of those affected are children, including 10 toddlers, and that at least 46 people—more than half—are rendered stateless. They report that the individuals are Shia and of Iranian heritage. Human rights researchers interviewed nine affected people and relatives of others, and reviewed government statements and related documents.

Bahrain’s Ministry of Interior says the people are “of non-Bahraini origin,” and that they are acting on grounds of national security, including claims that some “expressed sympathy for” or “glorified” Iran’s actions or engaged in espionage. The groups dispute that many families have lived in Bahrain for multiple generations and held Bahraini nationality for decades.

Human Rights Watch and BIRD say that after the April 28 administrative steps, affected people were ordered to hand over passports, IDs, and papers, were required to sign revocation documents and agree to leave by an unspecified date, and that some were deported or temporarily detained in other locations. The groups also cite changes to Bahrain’s citizenship law in 2019 and 2024 that they say reduce judicial oversight and limit the ability to challenge revocation decisions.