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POST TIME: 22 June, 2016 00:00 00 AM
Iran warns Bahrain ‘will pay price’ for crackdown on Shiites
AFP

Iran warns Bahrain ‘will pay price’ 
for crackdown on Shiites

Iran has warned Bahrain that it is fanning armed rebellion and “will pay the price” after an escalating crackdown on the country’s Shiite majority saw a top cleric stripped of citizenship, reports AFP.
Washington and the United Nations have also raised concerns about moves by the Sunni-ruled kingdom against Shiites, who account for some 70 percent of the Gulf state’s population.
Bahrain has been shaken by unrest since security forces crushed Shiite-led protests demanding a constitutional monarchy and an elected prime minister in 2011.
Tensions have reached fresh heights in recent days, with the suspension of the Al-Wefaq main Shiite opposition group and, on Monday, the stripping of top Shiite cleric Sheikh Isa Qassim’s citizenship.
Predominant Shiite power Iran has long championed the rights of the community in Bahrain and on Tuesday a prominent Iranian general said the move against Sheikh Qassim was a step too far.
“Surely they know that the aggression against Ayatollah Sheikh Isa Qassim is a red line... that will leave no option for the people but to resort to armed resistance,” Qassem Suleimani, head of the elite Revolutionary Guards’ overseas operations arm, the Quds Force, told state media late on Monday.
Bahrain’s rulers “will pay the price and it will have no result but the destruction of this bloodthirsty regime,” he added.
Iran’s foreign ministry criticised the “extrajudicial” measures by Bahrain that “dash hopes of reform through dialogue.”
Bahrain has repeatedly accused Iran of interfering in its affairs and inciting violence among Shiites, a claim Tehran denies.
The Bahraini interior ministry alluded to the accusations in its statement announcing the decision against the Shiite spiritual leader on Monday.
Qassim abused his position to “serve foreign interests and promote... sectarianism and violence,” it said.
There was no immediate indication of Qassim’s fate but, in theory, he would be left stateless and could face deportation through a legal process.
A leading Bahraini human rights group on Tuesday urged authorities to stop revoking citizenship “to punish political dissent.”
The move against Qassim “is yet another blow to freedom of speech and expression in Bahrain,” the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights said, adding that it was “part of an escalating crackdown on freedoms and rights.”
It urged the government to “immediately and unconditionally reinstate” the citizenship of Qassim and others, saying that it had documented evidence of at least 261 people being stripped of their nationality since 2012.
Monday’s moved triggered street protests in the cleric’s home village of Diraz, west of the capital Manama, witnesses said.
They said police deployed in force and sealed off the village, where thousands of demonstrators waved portraits of their religious leader and chanted slogans against King Hamad.
As well as the suspension of Al-Wefaq—whose political chief Sheikh Ali Salman is serving a nine-year jail term on charges of inciting violence—the crackdown has seen a series of arrests and jailings.