Friday, May 22, 2015

ISIL claims responsibility for Saudi mosque attack

At least 19 people are killed after a bomber detonates explosives during Friday prayers in Qatif province.

 

About 150 people were praying in the mosque when it was attacked [Twitter]
The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group has claimed in an online statement that it carried out a deadly bomb attack at a mosque in Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province of Qatif.
The statement said "the soldiers of the Caliphate" were behind Friday's attack by a suicide bomber "who detonated an explosives belt" in the mosque in the Shia-majority city of Qatif.
The group identified the bomber as Abu Amer al-Najdi, and published a picture of him.
Earlier on Friday, the Saudi interior ministry said in a statement that a suicide bomber had set off an explosion during weekly prayers at a Shia mosque, leaving at least 19 dead.
"It has been established that an individual detonated a bomb he was wearing under his clothes during Friday prayers at Ali Ibn Abi Taleb mosque in Kudeih in Qatif province," the statement, which was carried by the official SPA news agency, said.
The ministry spokesman called the attack an act of terrorism, vowing that "Security authorities will spare no effort in the pursuit of all those involved in this terrorist crime".
Al Jazeera's Hashem Ahelbarra, reporting from the capital Riyadh, said authorities expected the death toll to rise.
Pictures posted on social media purported to show the devastation, with dead bodies strewn across the floor and shattered glass covering the courtyard of the mosque.
Saudi Arabia's Shia population is mostly based in two oasis districts of the Eastern Province, Qatif on the Gulf coast, and al-Ahsa, southwest of the provincial capital al-Khobar.
The community accounts for between 10 to 15 percent of the total population.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the bombing, the first to target the Shia community in Saudi Arabia since November when gunmen killed at least eight people in an attack on a religious anniversary celebration, also in the east.

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