Kuwait Times

Bahrain Shiite cleric’s health deteriorat­es

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DUBAI: The health of Bahrain’s top Shiite Muslim cleric has deteriorat­ed, activists said yesterday, after months under virtual house arrest following a government decision to revoke his citizenshi­p. Bahraini officials did not respond to a request for a comment on the reports about Ayatollah Isa Qassim’s state of health. News about his condition has stoked tension in Bahrain as the Sunni Muslim-led monarchy pursues a crackdown on dissent by majority Shiites that has included closing down two main political groupings and banning activists from travel or putting them on trial.

Activists said Qassim, who is believed to be in his 70s, was suffering constant pain and excreting blood. Doctors who visited him on Sunday at his home in the village of Duraz, outside the capital Manama, have diagnosed him to be suffering from a “groin hernia requiring emergency operation”, according to the London-based Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD). “Such an operation carries a high mortality risk at Sheikh Isa Qassim’s age. He also suffers high blood pressure, diabetes and a form of heart disease,” BIRD added in a statement.

Sheikh Maytham Al-Salman, a prominent Bahraini interfaith activist, said the Manama government was responsibl­e for Qassim’s health as it controlled access to medical treatment. “The internatio­nal community must ensure Bahrain is pressured to ensure the safety of Sheikh Isa Qassim is protected,” he added in comments published by BIRD. The Interior Ministry announced in June 2016 that Qassim’s citizenshi­p had been revoked, accusing him of trying to divide Bahraini society, encourage youths to violate the constituti­on and promote a sectarian environmen­t in the Gulf Arab state.

The decision sparked angry protests in Bahrain and drew sharp condemnati­on from regional Shiite power Iran and statements of concern from the United States and Britain. In May, five people were killed when security forces raided Qassim’s homevillag­e to disperse followers who had camped out outside his house, and arrested 286 people, according to the interior ministry.

Qatar-linked trial Meanwhile, Bahrain’s jailed Shiite opposition leader Sheikh Ali Salman refused to appear in court yesterday to face charges of contacts with Qatar to “overthrow the regime”, the attorney general said. Salman and two members of his banned Al-Wefaq movement, Hassan Sultan and Ali AlAswad, are charged with “communicat­ing with a foreign state to commit acts hostile to the state of Bahrain with the intent to harm its political, economic and national interests in order to overthrow the regime”, Osama AlAwfi said.

The jailed leader of the Shiite movement “refused to attend the hearing”, which has been deferred to Wednesday, the attorney general said in a statement. —Agencies

 ??  ?? Sheikh Isa Qassim
Sheikh Isa Qassim

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