Post by Salem6 on Nov 9, 2003 10:00:28 GMT
Eleven people, including four children, are now known to have been killed by a suicide bomb attack on a housing complex in the Saudi capital, Riyadh.
The blasts caused widespread damage at the compound
Among the dead are Saudis, Sudanese and Egyptians, Saudi officials said.
More than 100 people, among them 36 children, were injured at the compound, mainly home to foreign Arab workers.
Saudi Interior Minister Prince Nayef vowed to "get the perpetrators no matter how long it takes" and urged them to "stop or surrender".
Al-Qaeda blamed
Saudi officials said the attack bore the hallmarks of al-Qaeda, which carried out a similar strike in May, but it is not clear why the compound was hit.
"I have many friends that have been injured. My wife's best friend is looking after a three-year-old whose parents are both in hospital" James, Saudi Arabia.
The explosion came a day after the United States shut its diplomatic missions in Saudi Arabia after "credible evidence" of a threat and the UK embassy in Bahrain issued a similar warning.
The US warned its embassy staff in the Saudi capital to stay at home on Sunday pending "further assessment of the security situation".
The BBC's Middle East correspondent Paul Wood says if the attack was carried out by al-Qaeda the question is whether it was a failed effort to kill Westerners or simply an attempt to cause instability in the kingdom.
International condemnation of the attack was swift, and Arab countries in particular expressed shock that it took place during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
Foreign workers
The blast hit the Muhaya compound shortly after midnight (2100 GMT on Saturday), setting off fires that burned until morning.
Immediately after the explosions, there were widely conflicting reports about casualties.
VIOLENT WEEK IN THE KINGDOM
3 Nov: Police kill two 'militants' in Mecca, capture six
6 Nov: Two al-Qaeda suspects blow themselves up in Mecca in shoot-out with police
6 Nov: Riyadh police shoot dead third suspect from Mecca
8 Nov: US diplomatic missions closed amid "terrorist threat"
9 Nov: Compound attacked
But hours later an interior ministry official, quoted by the state news agency SPA, said 11 people had died and 122 were injured.
Most of the injuries are light but 25 people remained in hospital on Sunday.
One American is wounded and another not accounted for, according to a US official.
SPA did not say if more people were believed missing under the rubble.
The nationalities of all those killed is not clear, although the Lebanese authorities said some of their nationals were among the dead.
Saudi security sources said the attackers got in by posing as guards and used a vehicle which looked like a police car.
The Muhaya compound, which has about 200 houses, is located around two kilometres from palaces belonging to many members of the Saudi royal family.
The complex is also believed to have previously housed Western employees of the Boeing aircraft corporation.
The BBC's Heba Saleh, reporting from the region, says those who authorised the attack may have been aiming to provoke an exodus of foreign workers who are vital for the Saudi economy.
'Al-Qaeda cells'
Thirty-five people were killed in a string of suicide attacks in May on western compounds in Riyadh. Security at compounds housing Americans and European has been greatly increased since then.
US officials point out that the May bombings were preceded by the arrests of suspected terrorist cells in Saudi Arabia.
Saudi police in Mecca recently uncovered a suspected al-Qaeda cell believed to be planning attacks.
The US embassy in Riyadh said on Friday it had "credible information that terrorists in Saudi Arabia have moved from the planning to operation phase of planned attacks in the kingdom".
The embassy urged all Americans in Saudi Arabia "to be especially vigilant in when in any area that is perceived to be American or Western".
A diplomat told the BBC that this has turned out to be "tragically good intelligence".
Video:-
news.bbc.co.uk/media/video/39548000/rm/_39548139_saudi12_boettcher_vi.ram
The blasts caused widespread damage at the compound
Among the dead are Saudis, Sudanese and Egyptians, Saudi officials said.
More than 100 people, among them 36 children, were injured at the compound, mainly home to foreign Arab workers.
Saudi Interior Minister Prince Nayef vowed to "get the perpetrators no matter how long it takes" and urged them to "stop or surrender".
Al-Qaeda blamed
Saudi officials said the attack bore the hallmarks of al-Qaeda, which carried out a similar strike in May, but it is not clear why the compound was hit.
"I have many friends that have been injured. My wife's best friend is looking after a three-year-old whose parents are both in hospital" James, Saudi Arabia.
The explosion came a day after the United States shut its diplomatic missions in Saudi Arabia after "credible evidence" of a threat and the UK embassy in Bahrain issued a similar warning.
The US warned its embassy staff in the Saudi capital to stay at home on Sunday pending "further assessment of the security situation".
The BBC's Middle East correspondent Paul Wood says if the attack was carried out by al-Qaeda the question is whether it was a failed effort to kill Westerners or simply an attempt to cause instability in the kingdom.
International condemnation of the attack was swift, and Arab countries in particular expressed shock that it took place during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
Foreign workers
The blast hit the Muhaya compound shortly after midnight (2100 GMT on Saturday), setting off fires that burned until morning.
Immediately after the explosions, there were widely conflicting reports about casualties.
VIOLENT WEEK IN THE KINGDOM
3 Nov: Police kill two 'militants' in Mecca, capture six
6 Nov: Two al-Qaeda suspects blow themselves up in Mecca in shoot-out with police
6 Nov: Riyadh police shoot dead third suspect from Mecca
8 Nov: US diplomatic missions closed amid "terrorist threat"
9 Nov: Compound attacked
But hours later an interior ministry official, quoted by the state news agency SPA, said 11 people had died and 122 were injured.
Most of the injuries are light but 25 people remained in hospital on Sunday.
One American is wounded and another not accounted for, according to a US official.
SPA did not say if more people were believed missing under the rubble.
The nationalities of all those killed is not clear, although the Lebanese authorities said some of their nationals were among the dead.
Saudi security sources said the attackers got in by posing as guards and used a vehicle which looked like a police car.
The Muhaya compound, which has about 200 houses, is located around two kilometres from palaces belonging to many members of the Saudi royal family.
The complex is also believed to have previously housed Western employees of the Boeing aircraft corporation.
The BBC's Heba Saleh, reporting from the region, says those who authorised the attack may have been aiming to provoke an exodus of foreign workers who are vital for the Saudi economy.
'Al-Qaeda cells'
Thirty-five people were killed in a string of suicide attacks in May on western compounds in Riyadh. Security at compounds housing Americans and European has been greatly increased since then.
US officials point out that the May bombings were preceded by the arrests of suspected terrorist cells in Saudi Arabia.
Saudi police in Mecca recently uncovered a suspected al-Qaeda cell believed to be planning attacks.
The US embassy in Riyadh said on Friday it had "credible information that terrorists in Saudi Arabia have moved from the planning to operation phase of planned attacks in the kingdom".
The embassy urged all Americans in Saudi Arabia "to be especially vigilant in when in any area that is perceived to be American or Western".
A diplomat told the BBC that this has turned out to be "tragically good intelligence".
Video:-
news.bbc.co.uk/media/video/39548000/rm/_39548139_saudi12_boettcher_vi.ram