22 June 2016 - 18:31
News ID: 422491
A
The representative of Shaykh Isa Qasim in Iran:
Rasa – The representative of prominent Bahraini cleric, Shaykh Isa Ahmad Qasim, whose nationality has been recently revoked by the Al Khalifah regime, said the popular uprising in the Arab country will remain peaceful in nature unless Manama resorts to assassinations.
Hujjat al-Islam Abdullah ‌al-Daqqaq

RNA – “The popular and peaceful revolution in Bahrain will continue,” Hujjat al-Islam Abdullah al-Daqqaq, representative of Shaykh Isa Qasim in Iran, said Wednesday in a press conference in Tehran.

 

It is not expected that the Bahraini revolution become violent unless the regime resorts to assassination of Shaykh Qasim or somehow try to keep him away from the nation, the cleric said.

 

Elsewhere in his remarks, Hujjat al-Islam al-Daqqaq pointed to a recent statement by Commander of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) Quds Force Major General Qasem Soleymani, who gave a stern warning against the Bahraini rulers’ continued crackdown on peaceful public protests in the Persian Gulf country and its recent move against Shaykh Qasim.

 

“The message by General Qasem Soleymani, God bless him, was a crystal clear message for the government of Bahrain,” Hujjat al-Islam al-Daqqaq said.

 

In a statement on Monday evening, General Soleymani described disrespect for Shaykh Qasim as a “red line” that, when crossed, will “spark flames of fire in Bahrain and across the whole region, leaving people with no choice but armed resistance.”

 

Bahrain said Monday that the citizenship of Shaykh Qasim has been revoked, accusing him of sowing sectarian divisions.

 

Bahrain, a close ally of the US in the Persian Gulf region, has been witnessing almost daily protests against the ruling Al Khalifah dynasty since early 2011, with Manama using heavy-handed measures in an attempt to crush the demonstrations.

 

Scores of Bahrainis have been killed and hundreds of others injured and arrested in the ongoing crackdown on the peaceful demonstrations.

 

Amnesty International and many other international rights organizations have frequently censured the Bahraini regime for the rampant human rights abuses against opposition groups and anti-regime protesters.

 

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