DUBAI (Reuters) – Bahrain’s Foreign Ministry summoned the deputy charge d’affaires of the embassy of Iraq on Monday to denounce footage of former Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki criticizing Manama’s crackdown on the Shiite opposition.
Maliki, who now heads an Iraqi coalition called “the State of Law”, attended a meeting last week organized by the February 14 movement, a Bahraini activist group which Manama designated a terrorist group in 2014.
“Discrimination, marginalization…have reached a severe limit on the people of Bahrain,” Maliki said according to videos from the event published by Iraqi media.
The former prime minister was quoted as urging dialogue with those “demanding freedom and justice” to protect Bahrain and Bahrain’s people, Sunnis and Shiites.
Bahrain described Maliki’s statements as “blatant and unacceptable interference in the internal affairs of Bahrain”, state news agency (BNA) reported.
“(A Bahraini official) described Maliki’s attitude as a clear solidarity with those who seek to spread chaos, violence and terrorism and exhibit hatred,” BNA said.
Iraq’s Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment, but it was expected to issue a statement.
Bahrain, like Iraq, is a flashpoint for the proxy war between the two regional arch-rivals Sunni Saudi Arabia and Shiite Iran.
The Gulf island state, where a Sunni Muslim royal family rules over a Shiite-majority population, has closed the main opposition groups, barred their members from running in elections and prosecuted scores of people, many described by human rights groups as activists, in mass trials.
Iraq has also struggled for years with the Sunni-Shiite sectarianism that followed the 2003 US-led invasion, ending with the disastrous war against the Islamic State militants.
Bahrain, which is home to the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet, has seen unrest with demonstrators clashing frequently with security forces in Bahrain in recent years, and there have been several bomb attacks.