Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bomber kills 21 at Saudi mosque

Islamic State loyalists claim attack, second against Shiites

- ABDULLAH AL-SHIHRI AND AYA BATRAWY Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Zeina Karam and Maggie Michael of The Associated Press.

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — A suicide bomber killed at least 21 people Friday in a blast inside a Shiite mosque in eastern Saudi Arabia as worshipper­s commemorat­ed the seventh-century birth of a revered figure, residents and officials said.

Loyalists of the Islamic State extremist group claimed responsibi­lity for the attack — the second against Shiites in the kingdom in six months. In November, the Islamic State was accused of being behind the shooting and killing of eight worshipper­s in the eastern Saudi Arabian village of al-Ahsa.

Despite a string of Islamic State-related attacks over the past several months, which also have targeted police, Friday’s suicide bombing appears to be the deadliest in the country in nearly a decade.

At least 21 people were killed and more than 60 wounded, the spokesman for the provincial health services Asad Saoud said, adding that at least 40 were critical cases.

Saudi Arabia’s Interior Ministry had not released its count for the number of dead and wounded, but it said a suicide bomber who hid explosives under his clothes was behind the attack. Interior Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Mansour al-Turki said the attacker struck the Imam Ali mosque in a village called al-Qudeeh.

In a statement distribute­d on Twitter feeds linked to Islamic State group loyalists, a group purporting to be the Islamic State’s branch in Saudi Arabia claimed responsibi­lity. It could not be independen­tly confirmed whether the new group actually has operationa­l links to the Islamic State, which is based in Syria and Iraq.

The group’s statement carried a logo in Arabic referring to itself as the “Najd Province” — a reference to the historic region that is home to the capital Riyadh and the ruling Al Saud family, as well as the ultraconse­rvative Wahhabi branch of Islam.

Habib Mahmoud, managing editor for the state-linked Al-Sharq newspaper in Qatif, said the attacker stood with the worshipper­s during prayer and then detonated his suicide vest as people were leaving the mosque.

A local activist, Naseema al-Sada, said the suicide bomber attacked worshipper­s as they were commemorat­ing the birth of Imam Hussain, a revered figure among Shiites.

The attack happened during a time of heightened Sunni-Shiite tensions in the region, as Saudi Arabia and Iran back opposite sides in conflicts in Syria, Iraq and Yemen.

Just before Saudi Arabia launched airstrikes against Shiite rebels in Yemen in late March, a purported affiliate of the Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity for suicide bombings in Yemen’s capital that killed at least 137 people and wounded nearly 360.

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, known as Wahhabis, 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 were shocked by the attack and “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.”

The country’s top cleric, Grand Mufti Abdel-Aziz al-Sheikh, told Saudi state television that the attack in Qatif aims at “driving a wedge among the sons of the nation” and described it as “a crime, shame and great sin.” The country’s top council of clerics issued a statement blaming the attack on “terrorist criminals with foreign agendas.”

Residents in the country’s eastern region say they are discrimina­ted against because of their faith. They said that despite the region being home to most of the kingdom’s oil reserves, their streets, buildings, hospitals, schools and infrastruc­ture are neglected and in poor condition. They say unemployme­nt runs high among Shiite youth in the area.

In 2011, Shiites in the east inspired by the Arab Spring uprising in neighborin­g Bahrain took to the streets to demand greater rights. Police arrested hundreds of people and a counterter­rorism court sentenced an outspoken cleric, Nimr al-Nimr, to death.

After the bombing, a few hundred people marched in mourning through the village, Mahmoud said.

Al-Sada, the activist, said she too holds the government responsibl­e for not doing more to criminaliz­e sectarian rhetoric.

“The government should protect us, not encourage sermons and schoolbook­s to incite against us as nonbelieve­rs,” al-Sada said. “We want them to prevent this from happening in the first place.”

“Martyrdom does not scare us, but we want to live like other citizens and with stability,” she said.

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