Bahrain busts terror cell, arrests Hezbollah-linked suspects

According to the official, the founder of the terror organization received support for its activities from the Lebanese Hezbollah terror militia through a Bahraini national.


:: Bahrain’s chief of terror crime prosecution Advocate General Ahmed Al Hammadi has said that an investigation has been launched in the case of the formation of an illegal organization with the aim of stalling the law, preventing the state from exercising its responsibilities, assaulting personal freedom and harming national unity.

Ahmed was quoted by Bahrain’s state news agency as saying that the organization was in contact with people working for a foreign-based organization engaged in terrorist activities for the purpose of carrying out acts of terrorism against Bahrain, targeting police and pubic order servicemen, participating in illegal rallies, sabotaging private properties and disseminating fake news likely to undermine national security and public order.

He added that “investigations revealed that the security agencies arrested one of the defendants who established the so-called Manama Human Rights Observatory as a front and a cover to support acts of terrorism in Bahrain.”

He divided the members of the organization into groups to carry out “activities that were allegedly related to human rights and to mobilize crowds for illegal rallies ostensibly to make human rights demands, but in reality to use them to carry out riots and acts of vandalism and terrorism against police personnel and vehicles and the Ministry of Interior building in Manama” according to the agency.

It added that the investigations also revealed that the founder of the “terror organization received support for its activities from the Lebanese Hezbollah terror militia through a Bahraini national who worked for the terror group and resided in Lebanon.”

The Advocate General said that they also revealed that Hezbollah was funding and supporting many people belonging to alleged human rights organizations in order to send false reports on the human rights situation in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

The aim, according to the agency, was to discredit those countries, undermine their status in international public opinion and damage their national interests through convening international conferences that included members of international human rights organizations.

Bahrain deports several Lebanese for Hezbollah links

One female suspect used human rights work as a cover to communicate and cooperate with Al Karama Foundation to provide them with information and fake news about the situation in Bahrain to undermine its status abroad, according to the statement.

Al Karama founder was included in the list of terrorists drafted by the Quartet combating the funding of terrorism (Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Egypt). He was also listed by the US Treasury as a terrorist and had his assets and funds frozen in 2013 over his ties to Al Qaida terror group.

Al Hammadi said that four suspects were arrested and the public prosecution questioned two of them in the presence of their lawyers.













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