Suicide bomber kills 21 at mosque
Dozens more injured at Shiite place of worship in deadly Saudi Arabia attack
RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA— A suicide bomber unleashed a blast in a Shiite mosque in eastern Saudi Arabia as worshippers commemorated the birth of a revered saint, killing at least 21 people and wounding dozens more in the deadliest attack seen in the kingdom in more than a decade. Loyalists of the Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the bombing.
The claim, made in a statement circulated on pro-Islamic State Twitter feeds, could not be independently confirmed. It was issued by what purported to be a Saudi branch of the Islamic State group, which is based in Syria and Iraq, but it was not known if the perpetrators had a direct connection with the group’s leadership or were sympathizers acting independently in its name.
Still, the bombing highlighted an increasing activity of Islamic State sympathizers in Saudi Arabia at a time when sectarian tensions have grown over the war in neighbouring Yemen, where Saudi Arabia is leading an air campaign against Shiite rebels. Past months have seen a string of smaller attacks on security forces blamed by Saudi officials on the Islamic State group, and in late April, Saudi officials arrested 93 people they said were involved in an Islamic State plot to attack the U.S. Embassy and other targets.
Friday’s bombing took place in the village of al-Qudeeh in the eastern Qatif region, the heartland of Saudi Arabia’s Shiite Muslim minority, which has long claimed of discrimination in the country, ruled by the ultraconservative Wahhabi interpretation of Sunni Islam.
The bomber stood among the worshippers in the Imam Ali mosque then detonated his explosives as people began to file out, said Habib Mahmoud, managing editor for the statelinked Al-Sharq newspaper in Qatif.
Local activist Naseema al-Sada said the worshippers were commemorating the birth of Imam Hussain, a 7th-century figure revered among Shiites.
Al-Manar TV run by the Lebanese Shiite Hezbollah group, carried blurry pictures of pools of blood inside what appeared to be the mosque where the attack took place. It also showed still photos of at least three bodies stretched out on carpets, covered with sheets. One person dressed in a white robe was being carried away on a stretcher.
At least 21 people were killed and more than 60 wounded, said the spokesman for the provincial health services, Asad Saoud. It appeared the number will probably rise, with at least 40 critical cases.
That would make it the deadliest militant attack in the kingdom at least since the 2004 attack on residential compounds of foreign workers in the eastern city of Khobar that killed 22, blamed on Al Qaeda-linked militants. That earlier attack was part of a wave of Al Qaeda-led violence that ended in 2006 as Saudi security forces moved to crush the terrorist network.
The Islamic State group, formerly Al Qaeda’s branch in Iraq that broke away and overran much of that country and neighbouring Syria, has become notorious for its attacks on Shiites, including a deadly Shiite mosque bombing in the Yemeni capital Sanaa that killed more than 130 people. It was blamed for the killing of eight Shiites in a mosque shooting in eastern Saudi Arabia in November. The claim of responsibility Friday was issued in the name of a purported IS branch in “Najd Province,” a reference to the historic region of the central Arabian Peninsula where the Saudi capital Riyadh is located.
The attack comes amid heightened Sunni-Shiite tensions in the region as Saudi Arabia and Iran back opposite sides in conflicts in Syria, Iraq and Yemen. The Saudi offensive in Yemen has sharpened anti-Iranian rhetoric inside the kingdom. Saudi Arabia accuses Iran of arming the Yemeni rebels, a claim that both the militias and Tehran deny.
Some ultraconservative Sunnis in Saudi Arabia have used Friday sermons to rally support for the war and simultaneously criticize Shiites and their practice of praying at the tombs of religious figures, which they view as akin to polytheism.
Mahmoud said people in Qatif “hold those who are inflaming sectarian rhetoric, from those on social media and in the mosques, responsible.”
He said that too often the public does not differentiate between what is Iranian government policy and what is Shiite, and “blame Shiites for Iranian actions in the region.”