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Saudi foils 'terror' plot, breaks up terror cells

Saudi authorities announced on Sunday they had foiled a "terror" plot by
elements suspected of links to Al-Qaeda, mostly Yemenis, and busted two
extremist cells in Riyadh and Jeddah.

The interior ministry said in a statement the suspects were "in contact with the deviant organisation abroad," a term usually used to refer to the Al-Qaeda jihadist network.
The suspects were working on "recruiting elements to execute criminal attacks targeting security
forces, citizens and foreign residents, as well as public installations," it said in a statement carried by the official SPA news agency.

The ministry said two Saudis and six Yemenis were arrested, and it also named two nationals as wanted for questioning.


"Investigations revealed that
those elements were at an advanced stage... including preparing
explosives and testing them outside Riyadh," the ministry said, adding
that one suspect accidentally lost a finger during the tests.
The first Saudi suspect turned
out to be the head of the cell in Riyadh, and he gave "detailed
information" that led to the arrest of the six Yemenis, who also
confessed to taking part in the plot, it said.
Police found "chemicals used for
explosives as well as mobile phones wired to detonate explosive devices
remotely," at an annex of a mosque in the capital, the ministry said.
Investigations also led to a link with the other cell in the western city of Jeddah, the kingdom's second largest city.

The ministry said that a Saudi member of that cell "who worked on preparing explosive chemicals" was arrested.

If any of those plots had succeeded, it would have been the first
since the suicide bombing against assistant defence minister Prince
Mohammed bin Nayef in August 2009. The prince suffered only superficial injuries after the bomber got close to him and detonated his explosives.


Saudi Arabia witnessed a wave of deadly attacks by Al-Qaeda between 2003 and 2006,
which prompted the authorities to launch a crackdown on the local branch
of the group founded by slain Saudi-born Osama bin Laden.

Following the crackdown, Saudi Al-Qaeda militants fled to neighbouring Yemen,
joining ranks with their comrades there under the banner of Al-Qaeda in
the Arabian Peninsula, taking advantage of Sanaa's state's loose grip on power.

In June, a Saudi court jailed 11 suspected Al-Qaeda members to between two and 15 years for plotting attacking on US forces in neighbouring Kuwait and on oil installation in the energy-rich kingdom.

In January 2011, cross-border police agency Interpol issued an alert to police worldwide for 47 Saudis with suspected links to Al-Qaeda, following a Saudi Red Notice.

Saudi Arabia is a key US ally in the war against Al-Qaeda.

In May, a Saudi double agent who infiltrated Al-Qaeda in Yemen helped foil a plot to blow up a US-bound airliner.

The Saudi national who held a
British passport was sent by Saudi counter-terrorism agents into Yemen
as a mole after it was learnt that AQAP was developing an updated model
of the underwear bomb that failed to explode in a Christmas Day 2009
attempt.

http://news.yahoo.com/saudi-foils-terror-plot-busts-two-cells-130927349.html


Added: Aug-26-2012 
By: Moe90
In:
Other News
Tags: Saudi, foil, terror, group, 2012, august
Location: Riyadh, Ar Riyad, Saudi Arabia (load item map)
Marked as: approved
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