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Bahrain's Shia Muslims Tense as Politicians and Preachers Pledge Allegiance to ISIS

Categories: Middle East & North Africa, Bahrain, Citizen Media, Human Rights

Photo from the profile of Turky Albinali, a Bahraini scholar who joined ISIS @turky_albinali

For Bahrain's majority Shia Muslim population, five recent events in their small island country ruled by Sunni Muslim al-Khalifa monarchs have them on edge.

These events involved powerful Sunni Muslims openly making dangerous sectarian comments in public without consequence, and swearing allegiance to the anti-Shia extremist group ISIS, which recently declared a caliphate [1] (Islamic state) in Iraq. 

Back in 2011, Bahrainis, the majority of whom are Shia Muslims, complained of political and economic marginalization [2] in the country of 1.3 million people, but recent events suggest a growing trend towards complete marginalization.  

The military cracked down [3] on Shia Muslim-led protests against the Sunni Muslim government in 2011. Since then, Bahrain has been accused of human rights abuses targeting Shia Muslims [3]. Low-level protests have  [3]continued to simmer [4]. According to Mark Lynch at Foreign Policy [5] magazine in 2011, “the Bahraini regime responded not only with violent force, but also by encouraging a nasty sectarianism in order to divide the popular movement and to build domestic and regional support for a crackdown.”

Among the tools used to sow the seeds of sectarianism that led to the following five incidents, empowering preachers [6]from the country's small extremist Salafist population has been at the top of the list. Besides being anti-Shia, Salafi is a puritanical Sunni sect that has inspired extremist militant organisations like Al-Qaeda and ISIS.

1. Bahraini preacher pledges allegiance to ISIS

Earlier this month, Turky Albinali, a Bahraini Sunni preacher, endorsed anti-Shia ISIS, which is accused  [7]by Human Rights Watch of abducting, killing and expelling minorities, including Shia Muslims. Albinali appeared in a YouTube video declaring his loyalty to ISIS's new khalifa (head of caliphate) Abubaker Albaghdadi (in Arabic):

 2. Bahrain's top Shia cleric is declared an infidel

Last week at a press conference, powerful former military officer Adel Fulaifel, who has been accused of torture [8], announced that Bahrain's highest Shia cleric Isa Qassim is an infidel. He added that he “will be hunted like a rat.” [9] He was responding to Isa Qassim's call to start a joint Shia-Sunni cleric council. 

Earlier this year, Bahrain closed the country's main Shia cleric council, [10] a move that started a series of protests around the country.

BahrainMomo tweeted to her 21,000 followers:

استقبال مشايخ تكفيرية و فليفل يكفر ويهدد بقتل علماء الشيعة واليوم اغلاق المجلس العلمائي الشيعي من قبل النظام ! سياسة دولة سلفية داعشية

— أم أحمد البحرينية (@bahrainmomo) July 15, 2014 [11]

Welcoming extremists clerics, Fulaifel threatens to kill Shia clerics and today the regime closes the clerics council! A policy of a Salafist state like ISIS.

3. US diplomat kicked out, radical Saudi preacher welcomed

Two days before Fulaifel made his threat, a US diplomat was kicked out [12] of the small oil-rich kingdom, which the US navy has used as a military base for years. A day later, the controversial sectarian and radical Saudi preacher Mohamed Alarefe was welcomed into Bahrain to give a series of sermons to young Bahrainis, despite the outcry of netizens [13]. The Saudi preacher has been classified as a threat to the UK [14].

4. Politician openly supports ISIS

Former member of parliament Nasser Alfadhala, who will be contesting the next election from the Al-Menbar party (which the UK suspects of links to terrorism [15]), openly supported the ISIS in this YouTube video last month:

«نحن نقف مع هذه الثورة التي صبرت طويلاً وطال انتظارها، لطرد هذا الظلم وهذا الخبث، الذي تدعمه بلاد الفرس، من أجل إذلال بلاد الرشيد، بلاد العزة والكرامة»

We support this revolution [by ISIS] that has been initiated to kick out the injustice and malice supported by the land of Persia to humiliate the land of Rasheed [historic caliphate], the land of glory and dignity.

Twitter user iProtester replied to that by publishing a photo of Alfadhala with flags of ISIS in the background, close to the American embassy:

An authorized gathering with the flags of a non-terrorist organization (sarcasm) in front of the American embassy led by Nasser Alfadhala

Journalist and satirist Faisal Hayyat tweeted:

تمت جرجرة خليل المرزوق بين النيابة والمحاكم بسبب رفع علم الإئتلاف،يا ترى هل سيتم جرجرة ناصر الفضالة بسبب رفع أعلام داعش؟ #مي_مقبولة [19] #البحرين [20]

— رياضيونا رهائن (@FaisalHayyat) July 18, 2014 [21]

Khalil Almarzooq was prosecuted and taken to court for raising the flag of the youth coalition. Will Nasser Alfadhala go through the same for raising the flag of ISIS?

Almarzooq is a leading member of the largest opposition group Alwefaq. He was arrested and put to trial [22] for holding a flag of the Bahraini February 14 youth coalition, which led protests in 2011.

5. Bahraini soldier defects

Last week, Sunni Muslim military officer Mohamed Albinali (or Abu Isa Alsalmi as he was dubbed by his fellow soldiers) tweeted:

أنا محمد بن عيسى البنعلي، ملازم في الداخلية البحرينية أعلن عن #انشقاقي [23] عن هذا النظام منذ اكثر من أربعة أشهر #البحرين [20]

— أبو عيسى السلمي (@bu3utbah) July 15, 2014 [24]

I Mohamed Isa Albinali, a lieutenant in Bahrain's Ministry of Interior declare my defection from this regime since over four months.

Bahrain's Ministry of Interior has been criticized for its sectarian selection policy [25] and its use of systematic torture [26].

This month, even though the financial watchdog IMF warned Bahrain it might be unable to pay government employees by 2017 [27], the tourism-dependent country banned three-star hotels from selling alcohol [28] or hosting music bands. Bahrain hosts 2 million tourists [29] every year. 

In 2011, when popular New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof visited Bahrain he described it as a quasi-apartheid [30] state. But as supporters of ISIS and preachers of hate and militancy like Fulaifel, Alfadhala and Alarefe are given more free reign in Bahrain, it increasingly seems like a complete apartheid state, meant to economically, politically and socially marginalize the country's majority Shia Muslims.