Arab Times

Saudis prevent suicide bombing

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RIYADH, Aug 24, (AFP): Saudi police shot dead a would-be suicide bomber targeting a mosque in the Shiite-dominated district of Qatif, the interior ministry said on Wednesday.

It was one of two attacks disrupted in the kingdom’s Eastern Province since early August, when a Syrian and a Saudi were arrested on their way to bomb a restaurant, the ministry said.

Tuesday’s attempted attack — the latest targeting the Sunni-ruled kingdom’s minority Shiites — happened around sunset prayers, the ministry said in a statement.

Security officers “managed

to foil a terrorist operation targeting worshipper­s” at Mustafa Mosque in Qatif, the ministry said.

When suspicious officers questioned the man, he tried to detonate a bomb in a sports bag on his back, leading the police to open fire.

The suspect died on the way to hospital.

Officers found 4 kgs (8.8 pounds) of explosives in his bag.

“A search revealed a Pakistani ID which is still being confirmed,” the ministry said.

The earlier case happened on Aug 5 when police stopped a suspicious vehicle in Dammam, adjacent to Qatif.

Two suspects tried to flee but were detained.

Officers found guns and a suicide belt with more than seven kilograms of explosives, the ministry said in a separate statement.

“They were trained by DAESH elements abroad to target, in a suicide operation, Al-Saif Restaurant and Cafe in Tarot” neighbouri­ng Qatif, the ministry said, using an Arabic acronym for the Islamic State (IS) group.

Initial investigat­ion identified the suspects as Abdullah al-Ghunaimi, 27, of Saudi Arabia, and Hussein Mohammed Ali, 24, of Syria.

“They were to implement the operation at 11:00 pm the same day,” the statement said.

“Investigat­ions so far reveal that two other Syrians are involved and have been

arrested.”

On July 4, a Pakistani resident of the kingdom blew himself up near the United States consulate in the Red Sea city of Jeddah, wounding two policemen.

It was one of three separate attacks throughout the kingdom that day.

One occurred at a Shiite mosque in Qatif, leaving the body parts of three people.

Near Islam’s second holiest site, the Prophet’s Mosque in Madinah, four people died in another suicide blast.

No group claimed responsibi­lity but CIA director John Brennan said the three bombings bore the “hallmark” of the IS group of Sunni extremists.

Since late 2014 IS has claimed a series of bombings and shootings targeting Shiites in the Sunni-majority kingdom, as well as the security forces.

Dozens of victims were killed, largely in Eastern Province, home to most of the country’s Shiites.

Authoritie­s arrested 19 people, including 12 Pakistani nationals, after the July attacks.

In another incident this month, a Yemeni accused of running over and stabbing a policeman in the southweste­rn region of Asir had pledged allegiance to IS, the interior ministry said.

IS group leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has called for attacks against Saudi Arabia, which belongs to the US-led coalition bombing the jihadists in Syria and Iraq.

Last week the son of al-Qaeda’s slain founder Osama bin Laden urged Saudis to “overthrow” the kingdom’s rulers in order to “free” themselves from US influence, SITE Intelligen­ce Group reported.

Al-Qaeda waged a campaign of shootings and bombings against foreigners and

Saudi security personnel between 2003 and 2007.

A stoning ritual which led to the deaths of about 2,300 people during last year’s Hajj will be more tightly controlled during next month’s pilgrimage, Saudi newspapers reported on Wednesday.

The period during which pilgrims can perform the Jamarat ritual will be reduced by 12 hours, the Saudi Gazette and Arab News said.

The symbolic stoning of the devil will be performed as usual over three days beginning Sept 11 at Mina, about 5 kms (3 miles) east of Makkah’s Grand Mosque, Islam’s holiest site.

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