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Bahrain oppn chief re-elected, gets summons

Published: 28 Dec 2014 - 06:42 am | Last Updated: 18 Jan 2022 - 02:19 pm

DUBAI: Bahrain’s main opposition movement Al Wefaq said yesterday that it had re-elected the leader of the banned Shia group, who was summoned by police hours later.

Sheikh Ali Salman, 49, was handed a new four-year term at Al Wefaq’s general congress on Friday night, in a meeting held to comply with a law on associations that led to the three-month ban.
The interior ministry ordered Salman to appear before police investigators today, said Al Wefaq, which described the move as “serious”.
Police will question key members of Al Wefaq for what it said were “violations” committed during a pro-democracy rally, Bahrain’s state news agency BNA reported yesterday.
Al Wefaq said Salman, was among those being questioned and that his house had been heavily surrounded by armed government troops as the notice was delivered to the Al Wefaq chief’s residence on the outskirts of the capital Manama.
It came a day after thousands of Shias protested along a road linking two of their villages near Manama to call for the dismissal of the parliament and government.
“Bahrain Authority is illegitimate. The people will continue struggle for freedom,” said some of the English-language banners they held aloft during a march.
Following the demonstration, which ended without incident, the opposition issued a statement saying “the government and the current parliament have no popular mandate”.
In July, the justice ministry sued Al Wefaq demanding it rectify its “illegal status following the annulment of four general assemblies for lack of a quorum and the non-commitment to the public and transparency requirements for holding them”.
The Manama administrative court slapped Al Wefaq with the ban on October 28 and gave it three months to hold an assembly to elect its leaders.
The ruling came after Al Wefaq announced it was boycotting a parliamentary election in November, the first in the Gulf state since Sunni authorities crushed Shia-led pro-democracy protests in 2011.
Al Wefaq, which withdrew its lawmakers from parliament in protest, denounced the vote as a “farce”.
It has called for an elected prime minister who is independent from the ruling royal family.
Pro-government Sunni candidates, including Islamists, won 27 of the 40 parliamentary seats in the November 22 election, with the rest taken by Shias including three women.
The parliament can examine bills proposed by King Hamad and has monitoring powers, while the Majlis Ash-Shura, a consultative council whose 40 members are appointed, can block legislation coming out of the lower house.
Agencies