23 May 2015

ISIS warns of more 'black days' after Saudi mosque attack

ISIS claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing at a Shiite mosque in Saudi Arabia, warning that more "black days" loom ahead in a direct challenge to the rulers of the Sunni kingdom.

Friday's attack was the kingdom's deadliest militant assault since a 2004 Al-Qaida attack on foreign worker compounds, which sparked a massive Saudi security force crackdown. However, this ISIS attack in the village of al-Qadeeh in the eastern Qatif region targeted Shiites, whom ultraconservatives in Saudi Arabia regularly denounce as heretics.

The statement on ISIS's al-Bayan radio station, read aloud Friday night and posted Saturday morning to militant websites associated with the extremists, identified the suicide bomber as a Saudi citizen with the nom de guerre Abu Amer al-Najdi. The station also identified the attack as being carried out by a new ISIS branch in "Najd Province," referring to the historic region of the central Arabian Peninsula home to the Saudi capital, Riyadh.

The mosque attack killed at least 21 people and wounded 81, the official Saudi Press Agency reported. [The Daily Star] Read more