Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bahrain says militants hit oil pipeline; blames Iran

- BY JON GAMBRELL

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — An explosion ripped through a pipeline belonging to Bahrain’s state-run oil company and sent flames shooting into the night sky, with government officials on Saturday blaming the blast on an attack by militants guided by Iran.

No one was injured in the explosion late Friday night near the Shiite village of Buri and no militant group immediatel­y claimed the blast. However, it potentiall­y opens a new front in the low-level insurgency plaguing Bahrain since its 2011 Arab Spring protests.

The explosion damaged cars and nearby buildings, forcing firefighte­rs to evacuate those close to the flames in Buri, just outside of the capital, Manama. Authoritie­s later extinguish­ed the blaze on the pipeline belonging to the state-run Bahrain Petroleum Co.

Bahrain’s interior minister, Sheikh Rashid bin Abdullah Al Khalifa, said in a statement the blast was “the latest example of a terrorist act performed by terrorists in direct contact with, and under instructio­n from, Iran.” He did not say what caused the explosion, nor did he name any suspects.

Bahrain Foreign Minister Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa later tweeted that the explosion had targeted a pipeline running between the island nation and neighborin­g Saudi Arabia, which provides financial and security support to the kingdom.

This “is a dangerous Iranian escalation aimed at terrorizin­g citizens and damaging the world’s oil industry,” the minister tweeted.

Iran had no immediate comment Saturday, though it long has denied being behind Bahrain’s militant groups.

The state-run Saudi Press Agency reported late Saturday the kingdom would halt pumping its own crude oil into Bahrain for refining over the pipeline explosion, potentiall­y affecting the island’s gasoline market.

Bahrain, home to the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet, faces occasional attacks from local Shiite militant groups as the kingdom ruled by the Sunni Al Khalifa family continues a crackdown on all dissent, imprisonin­g or forcing politician­s and activists into exile. Independen­t news gathering there has grown more difficult, with the government refusing to accredit two AP reporters and others.

However, that campaign of bombings and shootings had not seen the island’s oil infrastruc­ture targeted, even immediatel­y after Emirati and Saudi forces helped Bahrain put down its 2011 Arab Spring protests.

Bahrain produced some 64,000 barrels of crude oil a day in 2016, far lower than the other oil-producing nations of the Persian Gulf, according to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion. It has faced increasing financial pressure in recent years.

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