San Antonio Express-News

Officials: Explosion injures three at Wwiceremon­y in Saudi Arabia

- By Angela Charlton and Aya Batrawy

An explosion at a Saudi cemetery where American and European officials were commemorat­ing the end of World War I wounded three people Wednesday, according to official statements.

The attack in the city of Jiddah follows on the heels of a stabbing last month that lightly wounded a guard at the French Consulate in the same city. It’s not clear what motivated the stabbing or Wednesday’s blast, but France has been the target of three attacks in recent weeks that authoritie­s have attributed to Muslim extremists.

“Such attacks on innocent people are shameful and entirely without justificat­ion,” said a joint statement issued by the embassies of France, the U.K., Greece, Italy and the U.S., whose officials were in attendance.

One U.K. national suffered minor injuries, according to the British government, while Greece’s Foreign Ministry said a Greek policeman serving in the country’s Consulate in Jiddah was wounded. The policeman, who was accompanyi­ng a consulate employee attending the ceremony, was hospitaliz­ed but his life was not in danger, according to the ministry.

A Saudi security officer was also lightly wounded, Saudi state media quoted a local official as saying. He added that an investigat­ion was underway.

Nadia Chaaya, an official who represents French citizens living in Saudi Arabia who was at the ceremony, said there were about 20 people of different nationalit­ies in attendance, making it difficult to say whether French diplomats were specifical­ly targeted.

She earlier told the French network BFM about the moment she heard an explosion as the consul general was near the end of his speech.

“At that momentwedi­dn’t really understand, but we felt that we were the target because directly we saw the smoke, and we were of course in panic mode,” she said. “We tried to understand, and we were most of all afraid to see if there was going to be a second wave.”

While the motive behind the blast remains unclear, France has been the target of several such attacks in recent weeks, including the beheading of a teacher outside Paris who showed caricature­s of the Prophet Muhammad to his class during a debate on free expression. Three people were later killed in a church in the southern city of Nice.

The depictions of the prophet sparkedpro­testsandca­lls for boycotts of French products among some Muslims in the Middle East and South Asia. France has urged its citizens in Saudi Arabia and other Muslim-majority countries to be “on maximum alert” amid the heightened tensions.

French President Emmanuel Macron has come under particular scrutiny among some Muslim leaders for his defense of the caricature­s as being protected by free speech. This has aggrieved and angered some Muslims who view the depictions as blasphemou­s and a form of hate speech.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States