Bahraini Detains Al-Wefaq Chief, Sheikh Salman

Local Editor
Police in Bahrain arrested the head of al-Wefaq opposition movement on Sunday after he had been called in for questioning, his party said.
After Sheikh Ali Salman's arrest, clashes broke out between security forces and hundreds of al-Wefaq supporters gathered at his house in the village of Bilad al-Qadim near Manama, witnesses said.
Police used tear gas and birdshot to disperse the crowds protesting against Salman's arrest, the witnesses said. There was no immediate news of casualties.
Salman had been summoned to the criminal investigation department on Sunday morning and questioned about "violating certain aspects of the law," an interior ministry statement said earlier.
It provided no further details.
Al-Wefaq's statement said Salman was arrested after a lengthy interrogation at the ministry by police.
His lawyer, Abdullah al-Shamlan, tweeted that Salman had been accused of "inciting hatred against the regime and calling for its overthrow by force."
He said he had not been allowed to attend his client's questioning.
Shamlan claimed the al-Wefaq chief was also accused of "insulting the judiciary and the executive branch," of "sectarian incitement", of "spreading false news likely to cause panic and undermine security" and "participation in events detrimental to the economy."
Al-Wefaq demanded the immediate release of its leader, calling his detention "a dangerous adventure that will complicate the political situation in Bahrain."
It said he had been detained for more than 10 hours "for the sake of investigation for false accusations against him".
The party statement denounced the security forces for erecting barricades outside several Shiite villages, mainly on roads leading to the al-Wefaq headquarters in a Manama suburb.
Salman, 49, secured a new four-year term as al-Wefaq chief at its general congress on Friday.
The same day thousands of civilians protested along a road linking two of their villages near Manama to call for the dismissal of parliament and the government.
In July, the justice ministry sued al-Wefaq, claiming that it rectify its "illegal status following the annulment of four general assemblies for lack of a quorum and the non-commitment to the public and transparency requirements for holding them."
The ruling came after al-Wefaq announced it was boycotting a parliamentary election in November, the first in the Gulf state since the authorities crushed pro-democracy protests in 2011.
Al-Wefaq, which withdrew its lawmakers from parliament in protest, condemned the vote as a "farce."
It has called for an elected prime minister who is independent from the ruling al-Khalifa family.
Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team
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