Bahraini protesters decry regime's demolition of Shia mosques
https://parstoday.ir/en/news/west_asia-i10549-bahraini_protesters_decry_regime's_demolition_of_shia_mosques
Hundreds of people have taken to the streets in Bahrain to condemn the ruling Al Khalifah regime for the demolition of several Shia mosques in the tiny Persian Gulf kingdom over the past few years.
(last modified 2021-04-13T02:52:40+00:00 )
Apr 29, 2016 03:27 UTC
  • Bahraini regime forces leave after dispersing protesters during clashes following the funeral of Ali Abdulghani, 17, whose family says died of injuries suffered in a police chase, in the village of Shahrakan near Manama on April 5, 2016. ©AFP
    Bahraini regime forces leave after dispersing protesters during clashes following the funeral of Ali Abdulghani, 17, whose family says died of injuries suffered in a police chase, in the village of Shahrakan near Manama on April 5, 2016. ©AFP

Hundreds of people have taken to the streets in Bahrain to condemn the ruling Al Khalifah regime for the demolition of several Shia mosques in the tiny Persian Gulf kingdom over the past few years.

According to Press TV, the protesters, hailing from all walks of life, marched throughout the capital, Manama, late on Thursday, calling for the downfall of the ruling Al Khalifah regime.

They also held up anti-regime banners and the pictures of the demolished mosques, chanting slogans like “The Ruling Family is Criminal.”

The Shia majority of Bahrain has long complained of being discriminated against in obtaining jobs and services by the Bahraini regime.

Last month, nearly 40 Shia clerics said in a statement that Bahraini Shia citizens “have always called for citizenship equality... without any discrimination based on ethnicity, color, religion or sect.”

Led by Ayatollah Sheikh Isa Ahmed Qassim, Bahrain's leading Shia cleric and the spiritual leader of the main opposition movement al-Wefaq National Islamic Society, the clerics stated that the nation reserves the right to demand a ruling system on the basis of “a constitution that does not sideline the will of the people.”

The clerics stated that their majority community in Bahrain has never sought “a sectarian state... let alone a one-sect state,” while demanding protection for the freedom to practice religious rites.

ME