DUBAI: Bahrain police firing tear gas and shotguns entered
a town Tuesday morning where a monthlong sit-in has supported a prominent Shiite Islamic scholar who
had his citizenship stripped by the government. At least one protester was killed and others were
wounded, activists said, and authorities arrested 50 people. Bahrain’s Interior Ministry earlier
wrote on Twitter that the operation targeting Diraz, home to Sheikh Isa Qassim, was to “maintain
security and public order.” It called the area a “haven for wanted fugitives from
justice.”
The Interior Ministry later said police arrested 50 people,
including some who hid inside Qassim’s home. It did not say whether Qassim was among those arrested,
though it said some security forces were wounded in the raid.
“During the
security operation, troops were able to remove all that disrupts the interest of citizens and
hinders movement,” the ministry said in a statement. “Police will remain at the site to ensure
people’s safety.”
Activists shared mobile phone stills and videos showing
youths throwing stones and climbing on an armored personnel
carrier.
Gunfire could be heard as white smoke from tear gas hung in the
air.
Another video showed a bulldozer smashing through the area that once
hosted the sit-in.
At least one protester, Mohammad Zeineddine was killed,
said Sayed Ahmed al-Wadaei, the director of advocacy at the Bahrain Institute for Rights and
Democracy.
Activists shared images of other protesters suffering what
appeared to be birdshot wounds and said more than 100 people were injured or suffered tear gas
inhalation, with some in serious condition.
Ebtasam al-Saegh, from the
neighboring village of Bani Jamra, told Reuters that mosques were calling residents onto the streets
to protect Qassim. “The situation is terrifying ... It’s making people really angry and the young
men are taking to the streets. The mosque speakers are calling out ‘God is Great,’ urging people to
come out and protect Sheikh Qassim,” she said by phone.
The operation
follows a Sunday court decision giving Qassim a year’s suspended prison sentence and seizing assets
belonging to him and his ministry. Two of his aides received similar
sentences.
Police have besieged Qassim’s hometown of Diraz for months,
tightly controlling access. He could be deported at any time after authorities stripped him of his
citizenship last June over accusations that he fueled extremism. His supporters deny the allegations
and called his trial politically motivated.
Shiites and others took part in
2011 Arab Spring protests for greater rights from the Sunni monarchy of Bahrain, home to the U.S.
Navy’s 5th Fleet and an under-construction British naval base. Bahrain put down the protests with
the help of forces from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
Since
then, Bahrain has seen low-level unrest. But the yearlong crackdown on dissent has raised the
stakes, with local Shiite militant groups claiming some attacks.
Activists
have also been imprisoned or forced into exile.
Bahrain long has accused
Iran of aiding militants, something the Islamic Republic denies.
Bahraini
MP Abdullah bin Huwail said in a statement that the security operation showed the government’s
resolve to confront an Iranian-backed security threat.
Bahrain’s King Hamad
bin Isa al-Khalifa met with U.S. President Donald Trump during a Sunday summit in Saudi Arabia.
Already, Trump’s administration had approved a multibillion-dollar sale of F-16 fighter jets to
Bahrain without the human rights conditions imposed by the State Department under President Barack
Obama.
“Our countries have a wonderful relationship together but there has
been a little strain but there won’t be strain with this administration,” Trump said
Sunday.
Activists and rights group warn Trump’s embrace of Bahrain will
only fuel the crackdown. “The timing of this operation – two days after King Hamad’s convivial
meeting with President Trump – can hardly be a coincidence,” said Nicholas McGeehan, a senior
Bahrain researcher at Human Rights Watch.
Saudi defends Bahrain's deadly crackdown
Agence France Presse RIYADH: Saudi Arabia on Wednesday defended the actions of Bahraini authorities who opened fire on a protest by supporters of a top Shiite cleric, killing five people.
The security of Bahrain "is an integral part" of Saudi security, the official Saudi Press Agency quoted a source in Riyadh's foreign ministry as saying.
"The source affirmed the support of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for the measures being taken", including in Diraz village near the capital Manama, it said.
These measures are to "address all terrorist attempts aimed at destabilizing and damaging" security and order, it added.
The Sunni-ruled Gulf state, where Shiites are a majority, has been shaken by unrest since 2011, when Bahraini authorities backed by a Saudi military force crushed Shiite-led protests.
Demonstrators were demanding a constitutional monarchy and an elected prime minister.
Bahrain's interior ministry on Tuesday said five people died among "the outlaws" in the Shiite village of Diraz, where supporters of cleric Isa Qassim were holding a sit-in outside his home.
Witnesses had earlier told AFP that several civilians were wounded when police fired at demonstrators throwing stones and Molotov cocktails at security forces.
Bahrain is located just across a causeway from Saudi Arabia, most of whose Shiite minority live in Gulf coast or other eastern communities.
Shiites in Saudi Arabia, who have long complained of marginalization, also began protesting in 2011.
Sporadic security incidents that have continued since then escalated this month in the Shiite town of Awamiya.
Authorities said a policeman died in a rocket propelled grenade attack on May 16, while at least two other people were earlier shot dead in unrest centered on a neighborhood slated for redevelopment.
A resident of the area reported gunfire early on Wednesday. |