Bahrain opposition rejects Israel normalisation deal

Bahrain's opposition has called on the region's people to resist the pact, throwing support behind the Palestinian cause.

A man walks out of a building showing an office billboard of  "The Bahraini Society Against Normalisation With Zionist Enemy" in Manama, Bahrain. September 12, 2020.
Reuters

A man walks out of a building showing an office billboard of "The Bahraini Society Against Normalisation With Zionist Enemy" in Manama, Bahrain. September 12, 2020.

Bahraini opposition groups have said they reject a decision by the Gulf state to normalise relations with Israel, with a leading Shia cleric calling on the region's people to resist.

Ayatollah Sheikh Isa Qassim, living in Iran, said on Sunday he was against normalisation between Arab countries and Israel, in a statement published by dissolved Bahraini opposition party Al Wefaq, a group close to Qassim.

The accords between Israel and the UAE last month, and between Israel and Bahrain on Friday, go against the will of the people, he said.

"There is a great divergence between the rulers and the ruled in thought, mind, aims and interests. Governments are experiencing a psychological defeat and want to impose it on the people, and the people have to resist this defeat," Qassim said.

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Opposition to the deal

A joint statement by a group of Bahraini political and civil society associations, including the Bahrain Bar Association, on Sunday stood against the deal.

"What results from normalisation will not enjoy popular backing, in line with what generations of Bahrainis have been brought up on in terms of adherence to the Palestinian cause," the statement said.

The head of Bahrain's highest court ordered judiciary employees not to criticise government policy or express opinions harming national unity, Al Bilad newspaper reported on Sunday.

Bahrainis have previously criticised their government's engagements with Israel, including last June's conference in Manama to launch a US-led $50 billion economic formula for Israeli-Palestinian peace.

A statement by the Palestine Liberation Organization on the project stated that the Trump administration was trying to sell a "mirage of economic prosperity" which will only perpetuate the Palestinians' "captivity."

Bahrain's Parliament, last April, joined social media calls to stop Israeli business and government officials attending an international entrepreneurship conference. The delegation did not attend.

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