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Al Wefaq National Islamic Society

Al-Wefaq National Islamic Society - Al-Wefaq
جمعية الوفاق الوطني الإسلامية - الوفاق
Leader Shaikh Hussain Al Daihi (Deputy GS)
General Secretary Shaikh Ali Salman
Spokesperson Khalil al-Marzooq
Founded 7 November 2001
Headquarters Zinj, Bahrain
Student wing Student First Bloc
Youth wing Bahrain Youth Center
Ideology Islamism
Religion Shia Islam
Colors Blue, Red
Slogan ديرتنا.. نحميها (We Protect Our Country)
Council of Representatives
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Shura Council
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Website
alwefaq.org

Al-Wefaq National Islamic Society (Arabic: جمعية الوفاق الوطني الإسلامية‎‎; transliterated: Jam'īyat al-Wifāq al-Waṭanī al-Islāmīyah), or Al-Wefaq for short, is a Bahraini political society, and the largest party in the Bahrain, both in terms of its membership and its results at the polls. Although it is by far the single largest party, with 18 representatives, in the 40-member Bahraini parliament, it has often been outvoted by coalition blocs of opposition Sunni parties and independent MPs reflecting gerrymandering of electoral districts. On 27 February 2011, the 18 Al-Wefaq members of parliament submitted letters of resignation to protest regime violence against pro-reform Bahraini protestors.

Al Wefaq's religious orientation is Shia and it is led by a cleric, Ali Salman. The party is close to a Shia clerical body in Bahrain, the Islamic Scholars Council, which describes Al Wefaq as the 'Bloc of Believers'. In 2006, the pro-government English newspaper Gulf Daily News alleged that al Wefaq had only 1,500 active members, although Al Wefaq itself claims to have 80,000 members and a leaked diplomatic briefing from the US Embassy in Bahrain described Al Wefaq as the largest political society in Bahrain in terms of membership.

Al Wefaq boycotted the 2002 general election, the first parliamentary elections held in the country since 1973, claiming that the 2002 constitution gave too much power to the unelected upper house, the Consultative Council of Bahrain, whose members are directly appointed by the King. In the 2006 election Al Wefaq received the backing of the Islamic Scholars Council which helped it win seventeen of the eighteen seats it contested. In the 2010 election, they increased their representation by one seat, winning all the constituencies they contested, to take 18 of the 40 available parliamentary seats.


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