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Bahraini Scholars: Struggle To Defend Religion Just Started

Bahraini Scholars: Struggle To Defend Religion Just Started
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Bahraini clerics hailed the endeavors made by anti-government protesters who resist the Al Khalifah regime's heavy crackdown on dissent, saying their struggle to save their religion has just started.

Bahraini Scholars: Struggle To Defend Religion Just Started

"The battle for the defense of religion is not over, it has just started," the Bahraini clerics said in a statement released on Friday, adding that Islam and their country needed those who would sacrifice their lives for this cause.

The statement came three days after the Al Khalifah regime launched a full-scale military raid on the northwestern village of Diraz, situated some 12 kilometers west of the capital Manama, to suppress a growing protest staged in solidarity with the top cleric, His Eminence Ayatollah Sheikh Isa Qassim, the spiritual leader of Bahrain's Shia majority.

During the raid in Diraz, Qassim's hometown, regime forces martyred at least five protesters, wounded dozens and arrested over 280 people during the crackdown, which took place shortly after a meeting between US President Donald Trump and Bahraini King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifah in the Saudi capital Riyadh.

On Sunday, a Bahraini court convicted Sheikh Qassim of ‘illegal collection of funds and money laundering' and sentenced him to one year in jail. It also ordered him to pay $265,266 in fines. The court ruling sparked widespread demonstrations across the country.

Sheikh Qassim also faces expulsion from the kingdom after authorities revoked his citizenship last year. His defense lawyers refused to attend hearings, which they saw as an attack on the country's Shia Muslims.

The clerics also vowed to "continue the path of the martyrs" who lost their lives during the "brutal" crackdown on Diraz inhabitants, the responsibility of which lays not only on the Al Khalifah regime but also on the US for its "complicity" in the regime's crimes against Shias.

They also stressed that Tuesday's raid would only boost Bahraini people's resolve to resist against the Manama regime's brutality.

Elsewhere in the statement, the clerics noted that the parents of those killed have an inalienable right to receive the body of their loved ones and to hold dignified funerals for them. They also said denying bereaved people their right to do so would amount to a "betrayal of God."

"No one can act without permission from the parents' victims, and any violation of this right is haram [forbidden by God] and betrayal of Him and His holy law," they added.

The deadly Diraz raid has drawn angry reactions from prominent human rights groups, with Amnesty International calling for an independent investigation into Manama's use of "excessive force."

This is while Saudi Arabia, which has been helping the Bahraini military in its crackdown on peaceful protests since 2011, defended Manama's brutalities in Diraz.

Home to the US Navy's Fifth Fleet, Bahrain has carried out a crackdown on opposition political activity and dissent since an uprising began in 2011 against the ruling Al Khalifah regime by demonstrators from the Shia Muslim majority.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

 

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