(Reuters) -
Bahrain's public prosecutor has charged a high school student and two
teachers with insulting Islam in connection with a video showing the
student reciting verses from the Quran to musical accompaniment, state
news agency BNA reported on Wednesday. According to Islamic tradition,
tajweed, the recitation of Islam's holy book, adheres to strict rules
of intonation which vary according to a number of recognized reading
styles. Footage allegedly showing
the student reciting Koranic verses while a teacher played an instrument
to accompany him were posted on social media, BNA said. The
Ministry of Education investigated the video and found that the school
had entered a competition for Koranic recitation, commonly held for
children around the Muslim world. Two teachers and the student were subsequently questioned by the public prosecutor. "The
public prosecution ... charged them with violating the Islamic religion
and insulting its rituals," the agency said. "It also ordered them
detained protectively over the case." Western-allied
Bahrain has a Shi'ite Muslim majority and is ruled by the Sunni Muslim
al-Khalifa dynasty. Although Bahrain has more liberal laws compared to
neighboring Saudi Arabia and some other Gulf Arab countries, it still
has deeply religious and conservative sections in its society. The
small island kingdom has been suffering political turmoil accompanied
by mostly small-scale unrest since 2011, when Shi'ite-led mass protests
erupted, calling for reforms and more representation in government.
Bahrain detains student, teachers over Koranic recitation to music
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