Bahrain Activist Nabeel Rajab Freed as Trial Adjourned


TEHRAN (Tasnim) - A Bahrain court freed prominent Shiite activist Nabeel Rajab and adjourned to next year his trial over remarks posted on Twitter deemed insulting to public institutions, a judicial source said.

The criminal court in Manama ordered Rajab's release from custody but barred him from leaving the country, setting the next hearing in his trial to January 20, the source told AFP, requesting anonymity.

Rajab, a member of Bahrain's Shiite majority, which has been protesting against the Persian Gulf kingdom's rulers since 2011, was arrested on October 1 after posting comments on Twitter about the interior and defence ministries.

In one of the tweets that were deemed offensive, Rajab charged that many of the Bahrainis fighting with jihadists in Syria were former security forces personnel who had developed extremist views during their service.

Rajab's lawyer, Jalila al-Sayyed, used Sunday's hearing to call for her client to be freed, according to the judicial source.

The trial has been condemned by advocacy groups, including Human Rights Watch, which also called for the charges against Rajab to be dropped.

Rajab is the director of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights and was freed in May after serving two years in jail for taking part in unauthorised protests.