Saudi says arrested 431 Daesh suspects, thwarted mosque bombings

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Saudi says arrested 431 Daesh suspects, thwarted mosque bombings
Shoppers stroll through a mall in Riyadh beneath an electronic billboard supporting the Saudi-led coalition's military action in Yemen.

Dubai - The Interior Ministry said terrorist plots to target a diplomatic mission, security and government facilities in Sharurah province and the assassination of security men were thwarted

By Reuters

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Published: Sat 18 Jul 2015, 5:00 PM

Last updated: Wed 19 Feb 2020, 8:36 PM

Dubai - Saudi Arabia has arrested 431 people suspected of belonging to Daesh cells, and thwarted attacks on mosques, security forces and a diplomatic mission, the interior ministry said on Saturday.
The announcement came after a car bomb exploded at a checkpoint near the kingdom's highest security prison on Thursday, killing the driver and wounding two security officials in an attack claimed by Daesh.
A string of deadly attacks carried out by followers of the ultra-hardline militant group based in Iraq and Syria has fuelled concerns about a growing threat of militancy in the world's top oil exporter.
"The number arrested to date is 431, most of them citizens, in addition to participants from other nationalities ... six successive suicide operations which targeted mosques in the Eastern province on every Friday timed with assassinations of security men were thwarted," the ministry statement posted on the official news agency SPA said.
"Terrorist plots to target a diplomatic mission, security and government facilities in Sharurah province and the assassination of security men were thwarted," it said.
Daesh has called on supporters to carry out attacks in the Kingdom and killed 25 people in two suicide bombings at Shia mosques in the country's east in May.
A Saudi man, reportedly aided by several other men from the Kingdom, blew himself up in a Shia mosque and killed 27 worshippers in Kuwait in June.
The group says its priority target is the Arabian peninsula and in particular, Saudi Arabia, home of Islam's holiest places, from where it plans to expel Shias.
The interior ministry said the suspects arrested in the Kingdom were carrying out "schemes directed from trouble spots abroad and are aimed at inciting sectarian strife and chaos."


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