Pakistan condemns Jeddah terror incident, reaffirms full support to KSA

Govt and people of Pakistan reiterate full support for and deep solidarity with the Saudi leadership, says FO


News Desk August 13, 2022
Foreign Office Spokesperson Asim Iftikhar. PHOTO: MOFA/FILE

Pakistan on Saturday strongly condemned the recent terrorist incident in Jeddah, resulting in the injuries to four people, including a Pakistani national.

On Wednesday, a Saudi Arabian man wanted in connection with a deadly 2015 bombing in the kingdom detonated an explosive device in Jeddah as security forces attempted to arrest him, killing himself and injuring four others.

The state media identified the man as Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Shehri.

Read more: Pakistani among four injured in Jeddah suicide blast

Al-Shehri detonated the explosive belt on Wednesday night in Jeddah's Al Samer neighbourhood, injuring three members of the security forces, who were seeking to arrest him, and a Pakistani national, SPA reported.

The injured, who were not named, were taken to hospital, read the report, without giving details of their injuries.

In a statement issued today, Foreign Office Spokesperson Asim Iftikhar Ahmad said: "We pray for the speediest recovery of those injured."

The spokesperson said that government and people of Pakistan reiterate their full support for and deep solidarity with the leadership, government and brotherly people of Saudi Arabia against any threats to the kingdom's sovereignty and territorial integrity.

Also read: Saudi identifies dead suicide bomber, confirms link to IS

According to Saudi state media reports, Al-Shehri was suspected of being a member of a domestic terrorism cell that coordinated the 2015 suicide bombing of a mosque in Abha frequented by security force members.

Eleven members of the security forces and four Bangladeshi nationals were killed in the attack, and 33 people were injured, state media reported at the time.

The Saudi Arabian government named Al-Shehri in early 2016 as one of six Saudi nationals wanted in connection with the bombing.

Saudi Arabia was the scene of a series of large-scale militant attacks in the 2000s, including on security forces and Western targets.

Such attacks were carried out by Dai’sh, al Qaeda and other groups. Though attacks have since mostly subsided, several people were wounded in a 2020 attack that used an explosive on a World War One remembrance ceremony in Jeddah.

Earlier this year, French prosecutors opened a terrorism investigation into a December 2021 explosion under a French vehicle involved in the Dakar rally sports race in Saudi Arabia.

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