Many detained for Saudi attack plot

Officials say 208 held for plotting assassinations and an attack on an oil facility.

#920019: Aramco oil refinery, Buqayq, Saudi Arabia, video still
Security forces are said to have thwarted an 'imminent' attack on an auxiliary oil facility [AP]

‘Imminent’ attack

Al-Turki said another cell was plotting to smuggle rockets into the kingdom, which has been battling suspected al-Qaeda fighters since they launched a spate of bombings and shootings in May 2003.

An interior ministry statement, carried by official Saudi media, said security forces had thwarted an “imminent” attack on the auxiliary oil facility by rounding up the eight members of the cell, which it said was led by a foreign resident.

Hussein Shobokshi, a Saudi journalist speaking from Jeddah, told Al Jazeera: “This is consistent with what has been planned in the past … applied by al-Qaeda and the like.”

Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil producer and exporter, announced in February 2006 that it had foiled an attempt to blow up an oil processing plant, the world’s largest, in Abqaiq in the Eastern Province.

The statement said the suspects were rounded up in a series of “pre-emptive” operations against members of the “deviant” group, official terminology for al-Qaeda suspects.

Some of those detained had formed “an assassination squad to target (Islamic) scholars and security men,” it said.

‘Rocket expert’

Another cell headed by an “infiltrator” who is an “expert in launching rockets” was plotting to smuggle eight rockets across the border to use them in “terrorist operations” inside the country, the ministry said.

More than half of those arrested, 112, were linked to “external” parties.

Such parties recruited fighters and sent them to troubled regions in order to take part in fighting in these countries and then return to “spread sedition and chaos” in Saudi Arabia, the ministry said.
  
It was apparently referring to Iraq, where Saudis are among foreign fighters fighting US-led forces.

Source: News Agencies