The headquarters of Bahrain's main opposition party al-Wefaq is seen in Bilad Al Qadeem, west of Manama

Bahrain’s main Shiite opposition group has appealed against a court ruling that it should be dissolved over terrorism-related charges, a judicial official said Sunday.
“Al-Wefaq has filed an appeal to the Court of Cassation” against its dissolution and the seizure of its assets, the official said.
A court in the Sunni-ruled Gulf monarchy ordered the group’s dissolution in July for “harboring terrorism,” inciting violence and encouraging demonstrations which threatened to spark sectarian strife.
The decision, upheld by an appeals court in September, drew strong criticism from UN chief Ban Ki-moon, Bahrain’s allies in Washington and London, and Shiite-dominated Iran.
In mid-October, a court ordered that Al-Wefaq’s confiscated assets be auctioned on October 26, later postponed to November 6.
Al-Wefaq’s leader, Sheikh Ali Salman, has been behind bars since December 2014 on charges of inciting hatred and calling for forceful regime change.
But on Oct. 17, Bahrain’s cassation court overturned his nine-year jail sentence and ordered a retrial.
His first hearing at the appeals court is set for Nov. 6, a judicial source said.
Al-Wefaq was the largest group in parliament before its lawmakers resigned en masse in protest at the crushing of Arab Spring-inspired demonstrations in 2011 calling for an elected government.
The group has called for Bahrain to become a constitutional monarchy.
In June, the authorities stripped Shiite spiritual leader Sheikh Issa Qassem, 75, of his nationality for “encouraging sectarianism and violence” and serving “foreign interests” — an allusion to Iran.

 

Source: Arab News