RIYADH, 10 November
2003 � Crown Prince Abdullah, deputy premier and commander of the
National Guard, yesterday vowed to root out terrorists and their
supporters. He made the comment while talking to Arab leaders who
called him to condemn Saturday�s terrorist attacks in Riyadh.
�We will intensify
our campaign to clamp down on terrorists,� the Saudi Press Agency
quoted the crown prince as saying.
Interior Minister
Prince Naif also reaffirmed the Kingdom�s determination to hunt down
those linked to the suicide attack at a housing compound here. �We
will get the perpetrators no matter how long it takes,� he said
while inspecting the devastation at the Al-Muhaya Compound.
�The people who were
behind this must stop these heinous acts or give themselves up. It
would be better if they gave themselves up because sooner or later we
are going to catch them,� Prince Naif said.
Prince Naif said the
perpetrators were acting on the orders of others but did not
elaborate.
�Let everyone here
and abroad know that this country will not be shaken, because we
derive our strength from God,� he said.
The Shoura Council
also denounced the terrorist attacks.
�The Al-Muhaya
Compound... was stormed by armed gunmen and a car rigged with
explosives was blown up inside the compound,� an Interior Ministry
spokesman said. He added that one vehicle was used in the attack, an
American sedan. Reports earlier said the gunmen were disguised as
police officers.
Saudi Television put
the death toll at 17, including five children. Prince Naif said that
of the 200 injured, �most have been discharged from hospitals,
except 25 to 35 people still receiving medical treatment.�
The Interior Ministry
spokesman said those killed in the blast were Saudi, Sudanese and
Egyptian. They included four children, he added. Four Americans of
Arab origin and six Canadians, including one naturalized, were among
the injured, he said. The rest of the wounded were from Arab states
and Africa, India, Bangladesh, Indonesia, the Philippines, Pakistan,
Turkey, Sri Lanka and Romania.
Residents of the Al-Muhaya
compound spent most of the day retrieving what they could from the
remains of their homes. Many walked around the compound with their
bodies bandaged and clothing bloodied searching for remnants of what
used to be �a fairly good life,� in the words of one 17-year-old
Lebanese.
�I have lived here
for two years and considered this to be a safe compound because 95
percent of the residents are Arabs. There are only four non-Arab
families that I know of that live here. Now I don�t know where in
Saudi Arabia I can feel safe. I want to leave,� he said. |
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Describing the events
of the early morning, a 16-year-old Lebanese told Arab News: �I was
sleeping when my mother came to wake me up. I immediately heard the
shooting and told my mother to call father and tell him not to come to
the compound because we didn�t know what was going to happen to us.
Right when she was calling him the bombs went off.
�We live a good
distance from where the blast happened, but the door flew off the
hinges and the windows shattered. Some of the broken glass flew into
my forehead. After the blast, the shooting continued for 10 minutes.
Then 15 or 20 seconds later, I heard the big bomb, and then everything
went crazy. Then the shooting started again for 10 more minutes. Some
of the units were completely demolished and on fire. The people living
there didn�t stand a chance.�
By early afternoon,
cranes had moved in to sort through the rubble and to remove the
wreckage. Filipino rescue workers employed by the municipality lay
exhausted just meters away from two exploded vehicles that carried the
death and destruction into the lives of these men, women and children.
One rescue worker told
Arab News: �I have been here since eight o�clock this morning and
have helped recover at least eight bodies, most of them children. Many
of the remains were torn to pieces and decapitated. I just don�t
want to see any more dead babies.�
The Al-Muhaya
Compound, reportedly owned by Abdullah Al-Muhaya, a Saudi Army
general, was used by Boeing until approximately seven years ago. Since
then, the compound has housed mostly Arab expatriate employees of
various companies. The compound is located in a valley atop which are
several royal palaces which showed signs of minor exterior damage
despite being up to one kilometer away.
The houses and
vehicles closest to the compound�s only entrance were riddled with
hundreds of bullet holes, a sign of a gunbattle between National Guard
soldiers and the terrorists. Approximately 150 meters down a small
two-lane road, past the compound�s main entrance, there is now a
five-meter wide crater that is three meters deep. Two-story buildings
within 50 meters of the crater have been reduced to a pile of broken
cement and twisted metal.
Arab News learned that
five hospitals received injured people from Saturday night�s blast:
King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center (KFSHRC), Medical
Specialist Hospital, Kingdom Hospital, King Khaled University
Hospital, and Riyadh Central Hospital.
Hamoud Al-Otaibi, a
media officer at KFSHCR, said the hospital received 41 cases from the
explosion that occurred in the compound.
At the Medical
Specialist Hospital, a Lebanese national was undergoing surgery. One
female relative was weeping in the aisle wearing a hospital gown.
[Reprinted with
permission of Arab News] |