Bahrain: Alleged Shia terror cell had high Iran links

Salem9022

Junior Member
MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — An alleged Iranian-linked terror cell had contact with the Tehran's powerful Revolutionary Guard and planned attacks against high profile sites, including Saudi Embassy and a Gulf causeway linking Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, authorities in Bahrain claimed Sunday.

The allegations from Bahrain's public prosecutor seek to strengthen charges of ties between the suspected underground group and Iran. Bahrain's Sunni leaders have accused Iran of encouraging Shiite-led protests that erupted in February on the island kingdom.

The report in the Bahrain News Agency, however, gave no further information on the suspects or other details to back up the allegations.

The accusations of links to the Revolutionary Guard — which is closely tied to Iran's ruling clerics — draws parallels with U.S. claims that an elite unit of the Guard was involved in a foiled plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador in Washington. Iran has denied the American charges.

Bahrain's majority Shiites insist they have no political links to Shiite power Iran. Bahrain's Sunni monarchy and its Gulf allies claim that Iran seeks to gain another foothold in the Arab world through unrest in the tiny strategic nation, which hosts the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet.

A Saudi-led Gulf military force was dispatched to Bahrain in March to aid the Sunni leadership.

More than 35 people have been killed since street clashes began nearly nine months ago. Protesters say they are seeking greater rights and an end to the Sunni dynasty's hold on top political decisions. Bahrain's rulers have offered some compromises, such as expanding the powers of parliament, but not enough to satisfy the opposition.

Authorities have sentenced dozens of people for anti-state crimes like trying to overthrow the ruling system. The case of the alleged terror cell is the first time officials are trying to prove a direct link to Iran and plans to carry out attacks. The suspected targets included Bahrain's Interior Ministry.

The public prosecutor's office also claimed the alleged terror group had links with anti-government figures in exile, including Ali Mushaima, whose father Hassan has been sentenced to life in prison on charges of links to the protests and violence.

The report Sunday said the five suspects have been ordered held in custody for 60 days while investigations continue.

Authorities on Saturday said four suspects were arrested in nearby Qatar. The fifth was detained in Bahrain.

The accusations come before next week's schedule release of an independent investigation into reported abuses by security forces and others during the height of the clashes.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap...XLWm3g?docId=6b17f1c8e14f4153894aac862f376d92
 

Salem9022

Junior Member
Another anti-Saudi plot foiled

By ARAB NEWS

Published: Nov 13, 2011 01:03 Updated: Nov 13, 2011 01:36

JEDDAH: A terror cell planning attacks against the Saudi Embassy, the King Fahd Causeway and other vital installations in Bahrain has been broken up, a Bahraini Interior Ministry spokesman said Saturday.

Four members of the cell were detained in Qatar and turned over to Manama, while a fifth Bahraini was arrested inside the country, said Gen. Tareq Al-Hasan.

The alleged targets also included the Bahraini Interior Ministry and other individuals. Al-Hasan said the four arrested in Qatar had been traveling by car from Saudi Arabia. Security officers at a checkpoint seized "documents and a computer containing information of a security nature (and) details on certain vital sites." They were also carrying US dollars and Iranian rials.

The four confessed that they had left Bahrain illegally at the instigation of others and gone to Iran to form an "organization to commit armed terrorist acts in Bahrain," the spokesman said. The four, who were sent back to Manama on Nov. 4, named a fifth accomplice, who was subsequently arrested, and the five have been turned over to the judicial authorities.


http://arabnews.com/saudiarabia/article532894.ece
 
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