FYI

Last Update: Sunday, 26 May 2013 KSA 17:42 - GMT 14:42
Bahrain calls Hezbollah head a terrorist, says must be stopped
Sunday, 26 May 2013
 Lebanese women wave Hezbollah flags while holding a picture of 
the movement’s chief Hassan Nasrallah in Mashghara in the western Bekaa 
Valley on May 25, 2013. (AFP) 
Sami Aboudi - Reuters, DUBAI 
Bahrain's Foreign Minister has called the head of Lebanese 
guerrilla group Hezbollah a “terrorist” after Hassan Nasrallah said his 
fighters would help bring victory to its ally President Bashar al-Assad 
in Syria’s civil war.

The comments represent a departure from 
the traditional Arab view of Hezbollah as a main force against Israel 
and show the widening sectarian divisions in the region over the war in 
Syria.

Sunni-ruled Bahrain has been rocked by political turmoil
 since majority Shi’ite Muslims took to the streets in 2011 to push for 
reforms and more say in the government. Bahrain’s rulers blame regional 
Shi’ite power Iran, Hezbollah’s main backer, of fomenting the unrest.

“Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sheikh Khaled bin Ahmed al-Khalifa, said 
that Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah is a terrorist and is 
declaring war on his own nation,” the Bahrain News Agency reported, 
quoting the minister’s twitter account. 

“Stopping (Nasrallah) and saving Lebanon from him is a national and religious 
duty,” he added, according to BNA.

Nasrallah said in a speech on Saturday marking the 13th anniversary of 
Israel’s withdrawal from southern Lebanon that Syria and Lebanon faced a
 threat from radical Sunni Islamists.

This was a plot devised by the United States and its allies to serve Israel’s 
interests, he said.

Nasrallah became a hero in the Arab world after his forces helped push 
Israel to withdraw from southern Lebanon in 2000 and confronted the 
Jewish state in a short war in 2006.

But Hezbollah’s increasing
 involvement in the civil war in Syria, pitting Assad’s minority Alawite
 sect, an offshoot of Shi’ite Islam, against the majority Sunnis, has 
turned many against his group.

Unrest broke out in Bahrain in 
2011 when thousands of people, mainly Shi’ites, took to the streets. The
 government of Bahrain has since crushed the protests with help from 
Sunni-led Gulf Arab states but regular protests erupt regularly.

Last November, Bahrain said it arrested four suspects in an attack that
 killed two people in Manama. Authorities said five home-made bombs bore
 the hallmarks of Hezbollah.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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