Bahrain Hosts «Israeli» Delegation, Al-Wefaq Reproves

Local Editor
The deputy secretary general of the al-Wefaq National Islamic Society said "there is no place for Zionists in Bahrain" after the Al Khalifa regime decided to host an "Israeli" delegation.
"The regime's decision to embrace the Zionists is an illegitimate decision, and does not represent Bahrain, or express the will of the Bahraini people," said Sheikh Hussein al-Daihi on Wednesday.
Bahrain Football Federation President Ali bin Khalifa Al Khalifa recently released a statement, saying that an "Israeli" delegation had been granted entry to the country to take part in a FIFA congress in May.
"The people of Bahrain will never abandon the Arab and Muslim cause, through trading with the Palestinian cause and al-Aqsa Mosque," Daihi said.
"The announcement that the Bahraini regime will host an athletic Zionist delegation does not express the will and decision of the people, because this government does not represent the Bahrainis, as they have not elected it, and [therefore] it does not have the right to work in the name of Bahrain and its people," he added.
The occupied Palestinian territories had been the scene of increased tensions ever since the "Israeli" apartheid entity imposed restrictions on the entry of Palestinian worshipers into the al-Aqsa Mosque compound in August 2015.
Daihi stressed that "Bahrainis are all with Palestine," while condemning the Tel Aviv regime's "oppression, arrests, corruption and injustice" against the people of Palestine.
Meanwhile, the head of the Bahraini Society against Normalization with the Zionist Enemy, Jamal al-Hassan, also "totally rejected" Manama's move.
"The Bahraini Society against Normalization with the Zionist Enemy denounces the statement [about] the obvious and direct normalization, and the unprecedented waiver of the Arab nation's principles towards the Palestinian cause," he added.
In July, a Bahraini lower court ordered the dissolution of the al-Wefaq National Islamic Society over alleged accusations of "harboring terrorism," inciting violence and encouraging protests. It further ruled that al-Wefaq's funds be seized by the Manama regime.
Prominent opposition cleric Sheikh Ali Salman, al-Wefaq's secretary general, had also been sentenced to nine years in jail for backing reforms in the country through peaceful means.
In June 2015, he was sentenced to four years in prison at a trial, which charged him with "publicly insulting the Interior Ministry" and "publicly inciting others to disobey the law" through his speeches. Amnesty International described that trial as "unfair."
After appealing the verdict, the Supreme Court of Appeal increased Salman's prison sentence to nine years in May on charges of inciting violence and calling for anti-regime demonstrations.
Scores of people had been martyred and hundreds of others wounded or detained amid Manama's ongoing crackdown on dissent with Saudi help since February 2011.
Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team
Comments
- Related News
