Haq movement
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The Haq Movement for Liberty and Democracy (Arabic: حركة حق) is an opposition political organization in Bahrain founded in 2005.with Hasan Mushaima as its Secretary general. Several of its leaders were previously in the leadership of the Al Wefaq society, but it also contains others, for example Ali Rabea, a secular nationalist previously associated with the National Democratic Action Society, and Shaikh Isa Al Jowder, a Sunni cleric [2].
Haq is opposed to participation in the parliamentary elections, because it consider the 2002 Constitution of Bahrain to be illegal and unilaterally imposed by King Hamad ibn Isa Al Khalifah, replacing the 1973 Constitution [3].
Haq movement called on the United Nations November 15, 2006 to investigate allegations that a secret government grouping has been conspiring to fuel sectarian tensions and rig the results of upcoming parliamentary and municipal elections. In a letter addressed to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan and delivered to Sayed Aqa, the UN Development Programme's (UNDP) Bahrain coordinator, Haq called for the forming of an international fact- finding committee to scrutinize the claims made in an August report by the Gulf Centre for Democratic Development (GCDD).
The 240-page report, dubbed Bandar Gate after its co-author Salah Al Bandar - a Briton of Sudanese origin who was deported in September to Britain after its publication - alleged that a ring masterminded by a government minister was secretly planning to manipulate the demographic makeup of the country, through the selective granting of citizenship[1]