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World / Middle East

Bahrain court dissolves main opposition bloc

Published: 17 Jul 2016 - 11:26 am | Last Updated: 07 Nov 2021 - 06:37 pm
Peninsula

A senior nurse Rula al-Saffar holds a banner with photos of Dr Ali al-Ekri and Ebrahim Demistani as she participates in an anti-government rally organized by Bahrain's main opposition party Al Wefaq in Budaiya, west of Manama, December 13, 2013. (REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed/File Photo)

 

Dubai: A Bahraini court on Sunday ordered the kingdom's main opposition group Al-Wefaq to be dissolved, a judicial source said, after authorities accused it of "harbouring terrorism."

The administrative court in Manama also ordered the Shiite movement's funds to be seized by the government, the source said.

The ruling comes despite appeals by the United Nations and United States for the legal process against the bloc to be dropped.

Al-Wefaq was the largest in parliament before its lawmakers resigned in protest at the crushing of 2011 protests calling for an elected government.

Washington has labelled the crackdown on it "alarming".

On June 28, its defence lawyers withdrew from court proceedings in protest at the government's push to accelerate the process, which was initially set for October 6.

The court already suspended all of Al-Wefaq's activities on June 14, ordering its offices closed and assets frozen.

The justice ministry, which had requested dissolving Al-Wefaq, accused the bloc of providing a haven for "terrorism, radicalisation and violence" and opening the way for "foreign interference" in the kingdom's affairs.

That was an allusion to Iran, which Sunni-ruled Bahrain accuses of fomenting unrest among its Shiite majority.

Al-Wefaq draws most of its support from the Shiite majority in Bahrain.

Its chief, Shiite cleric Ali Salman, is serving a nine-year jail term for inciting violence after a court in May more than doubled his sentence.

His arrest in December 2014 sparked protests in Bahrain, already rocked by a Shiite-led uprising that erupted in February 2011.

AFP