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  • Deadly blast hits Saudi capital

    Deadly blast hits Saudi capital

    A powerful explosion has left at least one person dead and many injured in Saudi Arabia's capital, Riyadh.
    The blast, shortly after midnight (2100 GMT) on Sunday, hit the Muhaya residential compound, which houses mainly Saudi workers - as well as foreigners - in the west of the capital.

    At least one Arabic woman has died, with reports of up to 100 people injured, many of them children.

    Saudi officials have said that the attack bore the hallmarks of an al-Qaeda suicide bombing.

    "This is a crime against innocents which is in the style of al-Qaeda, it is an al-Qaeda operation," said a Saudi security source quoted by Reuters news agency.

    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.

    Saudi police in Mecca recently uncovered a suspected al-Qaeda cell believed to be planning attacks.

    Thirty-five people were killed in a string of suicide attacks in May on a Western compound in Riyadh.

    The Saudi ambassador in London, Prince Turki al-Faisal, condemned the attack as "a terrible event carried out by evil people whose sole aim is the destruction of the kingdom".

    Screams

    There are no confirmed foreign fatalities, but one American is wounded and another missing, according to a US diplomat.

    The UK Foreign Office said two Britons were unaccounted for.

    Government officials said that gunmen tried to enter the compound, where there are about 200 houses, and there was an exchange of fire with security guards.

    Eyewitnesses said the attackers tried to get through an outer wall, to drive a car bomb as close as possible before detonating it.

    It is unknown how many people were involved in the attacks.

    At least 10 houses are reported to have been destroyed.

    Initial reports suggest up to three explosions hit the area -and they were powerful enough to be heard across the Saudi capital.

    "We heard very strong explosion and we saw the fire," Bassem al-Hourani, who said he was a resident at the targeted compound, told Arabic television station Al-Arabiya.

    "I heard screams of the children and women... I saw a lot of people injured and I believe there a lot of people dead," he said.

    Many of the injured are children who were at home while their parents were out, following the breaking of the Ramadan fast for the day.

    During Ramadan, shopping and public life takes place after sunset and people stay out later in the evenings.

    'Extremely wary'

    The US embassy in Riyadh said on Friday it had "credible information that terrorists in Saudi Arabia have moved from the planning to operational phase of planned attacks in the kingdom."

    The statement said: "The embassy strongly urges all American citizens in the kingdom to be especially vigilant when in any area that is perceived to be American or Western."

    State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said fears of an imminent attack in the kingdom meant it was "prudent... to warn Americans and to close our operations for a review."

    Missions in Riyadh, Jeddah and Dhahran were closed on Saturday.

    Britain, Canada and Australia last month issued similar alerts, which angered Saudi officials, who say they have made important strides in fighting terror inside the country.

    Terrorist funding

    On Thursday, two suspected members of the al-Qaeda cell in Mecca blew themselves up apparently to avoid arrest, while a third suspect was shot dead by security forces in Riyadh.

    The US Secretary of State Colin Powell, in an interview with a London-based Saudi newspaper Ash-Sharq Al-Awsat, said he thought the Saudi authorities could do more to combat terror.

    Saudi Arabia could make greater efforts in pursuing the sources of terrorist funding, he told the newspaper.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/3254103.stm
    "Every man has his weakness. Mine was always just cigarettes."
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