Bahrain said Sunday it has adopted measures including travel curbs and monitoring of money transfers to counter Iran's ‘interference’ in the kingdom.

Interior Minister Sheikh Rashid Al-Khalifa spoke of the ‘dangers of Iran's interference in the internal security’ of Bahrain during a meeting with clerics, MPs and newspaper chiefs, said the official BNA news agency.

‘We have taken a series of measures to confront the dangers of terrorism,’ Sheikh Rashid said.

These include forming a committee to monitor money transfers and donations to combat the ‘financing of terrorism’ and imposing travel restrictions on citizens, especially aged between 14 and 18, to ‘unsafe countries’, he said.

Bahrain has previously announced the dismantling of ‘terror’ cells whose members it said were trained by Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards and Lebanon's Tehran-backed Shia movement Hezbollah.

Sheikh Rashid said authorities will also take measures to ‘protect religious discourse against religious and political extremism as well as incitement’.

Authorities will confront any ‘attempts to politicise’ Shia religious rituals, the interior minister said.

Manama accuses Iran of backing the Bahraini opposition.

In November, Bahrain said it had uncovered a ‘terrorist organisation’ linked to Tehran and arrested its members, which Sheikh Rashid said numbered 76 suspects.

‘We do not accuse anyone without substantial evidence,’ he said Sunday.

Bahrain, just across the Gulf from Iran and home to the US Fifth Fleet, has seen frequent clashes between protesters and security forces in Shia villages.

 

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