Bahraini authorities have detained four Shiite activists before a parliamentary poll in which Shiites will be seeking a bigger role in governing the Sunni Muslim-led Arab state, their lawyer said on Sunday.
The arrests could heighten tensions with Bahrain’s Shiite majority before the Oct. 23 election, the US-allied Gulf island state’s third since its king launched a political reform process a decade ago to help quell Shiite protests.
Clashes erupted in at least two Shiite villages on Saturday night following the Friday arrest of the first of the activists, said Nabeel Rajab, head of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights.
“Three more were arrested this morning,” lawyer Mohammed al-Tajer told reporters.
Tajer said the head of human rights at the mainly Shiite Haq movement, Abduljalil Singace, was detained on Friday on his return from London where he gave a lecture on human rights in Bahrain, home to the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet.
Bahrain, where the Sunni al-Khalifa family rules over an often disgruntled Shiite majority, regularly sees night-time clashes between security forces and protesters in Shiite towns.
The state news agency BNA said the four were accused of belonging to a network threatening “Bahrain’s stability, civil peace and endangering the lives and property of the innocent [through] incitement to violence and terrorist acts.”
On Sunday following the protests, Abdulghani al-Kanjar, who heads a committee of Bahrain human rights groups to support victims of torture, was detained along with Shiite cleric and activist Mohammed al-Magdad.
A third activist, Saeed al-Nouri, was also arrested.
Two of the detained men, Singace and Magdad, were among three activists held for several months last year on charges of plotting to overthrow the government. They were later pardoned by the king after weeks of protests and human rights criticism.
The Oct. 23 elections were not expected to meet Shiite opposition demands for more political participation. Many Shiites complain of discrimination in jobs and services, an accusation Manama denies.
Bahrain’s largest Shiite opposition bloc, Al Wefaq, plans to participate in the poll where it will field candidates for up to 24 of 40 slots. It currently holds 17 seats it won in 2006.
Bahrain’s parliament is the only one in the Gulf Arab region besides the Kuwaiti assembly, but its powers are limited as its bills need to be approved by an upper house whose members are appointed by the king.
Eleven people, including a former minister, were arrested in Serbia on Friday over a train station disaster in which 16 people died. The concrete canopy of the newly renovated station in the northern city of Novi Sad collapsed on Nov. 1, 2024 in a disaster widely blamed on corruption and poor oversight. It sparked a wave of student-led protests and led to the resignation of then-Serbian prime minister Milos Vucevic and the fall of his government. The public prosecutor’s office in Novi Sad opened an investigation into the accident and deaths. In February, the public prosecutor’s office for organized crime opened another probe into
RISING RACISM: A Japanese group called on China to assure safety in the country, while the Chinese embassy in Tokyo urged action against a ‘surge in xenophobia’ A Japanese woman living in China was attacked and injured by a man in a subway station in Suzhou, China, Japanese media said, hours after two Chinese men were seriously injured in violence in Tokyo. The attacks on Thursday raised concern about xenophobic sentiment in China and Japan that have been blamed for assaults in both countries. It was the third attack involving Japanese living in China since last year. In the two previous cases in China, Chinese authorities have insisted they were isolated incidents. Japanese broadcaster NHK did not identify the woman injured in Suzhou by name, but, citing the Japanese
RESTRUCTURE: Myanmar’s military has ended emergency rule and announced plans for elections in December, but critics said the move aims to entrench junta control Myanmar’s military government announced on Thursday that it was ending the state of emergency declared after it seized power in 2021 and would restructure administrative bodies to prepare for the new election at the end of the year. However, the polls planned for an unspecified date in December face serious obstacles, including a civil war raging over most of the country and pledges by opponents of the military rule to derail the election because they believe it can be neither free nor fair. Under the restructuring, Myanmar’s junta chief Min Aung Hlaing is giving up two posts, but would stay at the
YELLOW SHIRTS: Many protesters were associated with pro-royalist groups that had previously supported the ouster of Paetongtarn’s father, Thaksin, in 2006 Protesters rallied on Saturday in the Thai capital to demand the resignation of court-suspended Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra and in support of the armed forces following a violent border dispute with Cambodia that killed more than three dozen people and displaced more than 260,000. Gathered at Bangkok’s Victory Monument despite soaring temperatures, many sang patriotic songs and listened to speeches denouncing Paetongtarn and her father, former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, and voiced their backing of the country’s army, which has always retained substantial power in the Southeast Asian country. Police said there were about 2,000 protesters by mid-afternoon, although