Saudi Arabia says it has arrested 135 people on
"terrorism" offences, with dozens suspected of having links to the
Islamic State of the Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and planning to
destabilise the kingdom.
The country's interior ministry said on Sunday that 135 people,
including 26 foreign nationals, were among those arrested in raids
carried out across the country.
Forty of the suspects had gone to "zones of conflict, joined
extremist groups and trained in the handling of weapons ... before
returning to the kingdom to destabilise the country," interior ministry
spokesman, Mansour al-Turki, said in a statement.
Numerous others were implicated in the "financing, recruitment,
propaganda and manufacture of explosives ... in aid of extremist
groups".
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Pinpointing military and humanitarian aid from nations in the international struggle against the armed group. |
The arrests followed "repeated attempts to harm the security and stability of the homeland", Turki said.
Seventeen suspects were said to be linked to unrest and armed attacks
on security forces in Awamiya, a Shia-dominated community in the
eastern province that has been a focus for clashes between minority Shia
protesters and security forces.
The 26 foreign nationals included 16 Syrians, three Yemenis, an
Egyptian, a Lebanese, an Afghan, an Ethiopian, a Bahraini, an Iraqi and a
stateless person.
A Saudi government adviser, who declined to be named, told the AFP
news agency that the latest arrests demonstrated the interior ministry
was "in control" of the threat posed by ISIL.
The arrests come as Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan
and Bahrain take part in US-led air strikes against ISIL in Iraq and
Syria.
Westerners attacked
Last week an ISIL-linked media group released a video claiming to
show the shooting in Riyadh of a Danish national by its "supporters",
the US-based SITE Intelligence Group said.
Denmark has confirmed that one of its citizens was shot and wounded in the Saudi capital on November 22.
The video carries an audio recording, allegedly of ISIL leader Abu
Bakr al-Baghdadi, saying that Saudi rulers will see "no more security or
rest".
In November, Saudi Arabia blamed ISIL-linked suspects for the killing of seven Shia, including children, in Eastern Province.
As the birthplace of Islam and a champion of Sunni doctrine, Saudi
Arabia is an important ally for Western countries battling ISIL, and its
monarchy a symbolic target for the armed group. |
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