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Awamiya: Hundreds flee clashes in Saudi town

Don't you think that those civilians need someone to protect them from Takfiri terrorists?
The takfiri terrorists were bashar allies in Iraq and he freed them in the beginning of the syrian protest

The only reason why there are takfiri to begin with its because of the divisions among the Syrians

Syrians like Egypt and Tunis they don't need anyone to protect them because they are the majority and if bashar stepped down the army wouldn't have engaged in war that destroyed most if it and most of Syria

Tut tut Hasani, supporting ISIS beheadings.

@waz
Sunni terrorist killing Shia terrorist you should be happy
 
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The takfiri terrorists were bashar allies in Iraq and he freed them in the beginning of the syrian protest

The only reason why there are takfiri to begin with its because of the divisions among the Syrians

Syrians like Egypt and Tunis they don't need anyone to protect them because they are the majority and if bashar stepped down the army wouldn't have engaged in war that destroyed most if it and most of Syria

Assad freed prisoners for negotiations with the opposite groups as a positive move. Yes, he did it to bring the oppositions on the table and was appreciated. Unfortunately war was all those oppositions wanted from Assad.

Did you know that 4 million Syrians are seeking for asylum in EU?
And who was responsible for it? Who did arm those terrorists against Syrian people?

Most of Syrian territories were occupied by ISIS for example Deir ul zor province. This map shows the progress of ISIS in the first days of war.

ISIS doesn't belong to Syrian opposition, they were armed by NATO through Turkey, KSA and Jordan. You can see Russian, English, German, Tunisian, Egyptian, Chechenyan, European , African militants between ISIS terrorists that armed and trained by CIA. Yellow pieces show the Kurdish separatists and the blue parts show Al-Nusra front terrorists. What did you expect Assad and Syrian army to do in that situation? Give up Syrians to ISIS and Al-Nusra?
FSA as militants of Syrian army had very little role in rebel and all of them betrayed Assad and people of Syria.
Furthermore Assad was elected by Syrians,
462392_771.jpg

Assad will unite Syrian people once again and indeed he is the only hope for peace and preventing Afghanistan's scenario in Syria. Actually i want Assad to be the finisher of war instead of ISIS or Americans who will never give up war like the story of Afghanistan and Taliban.
 
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The people who do not have any moral authority to comment over the issue:

1. Supporters of Iranian and Assadi crimes in Syria
2. Supporters of Iraqi and Iranian thugs inhuman crimes in Sunni majority areas of Iraq in the name of ISIS fight.
3. Supporters of US invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan.
4. Supporters of Israeli crimes in Palestine.
5. Supports of Indian oppressive crimes in Kashmir.
6. Supporters of Russian crimes in Syria.
 
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The people who do not have any moral authority to comment over the issue:

1. Supporters of Iranian and Assadi crimes in Syria
2. Supporters of Iraqi and Iranian thugs inhuman crimes in Sunni majority areas of Iraq in the name of ISIS fight.
3. Supporters of US invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan.
4. Supporters of Israeli crimes in Palestine.
5. Supports of Indian oppressive crimes in Kashmir.
6. Supporters of Russian crimes in Syria.
For all you say my friend, i have only one answer.

Ale-Saud family is the same ISIS with a legitimate cover on their face. Now get along with truth.
 
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For all you say my friend, i have only one answer.

Ale-Saud family is the same ISIS with a legitimate cover on their face. Now get along with truth.

You can find many other on this forum to play the ISIS card with but not here my friend. Get along and try to fathom what the likes of you and your state has orchestrated.
On a personal note, I condemn every kind of state terrorism on innocent people sold out with politically correct terminologies using narratives created through media frenzy. No matter who is the perpetrator e.g. Iran, Saudia, Iraq, Syria.
 
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Since Egypt has announced its position concerning the Syrian conflict it has also announced the cell that tried to kill President Sissi and Saudi Crown Prince in Mecca _with the evidence provided by the Saudi authorities_, had its planners residing in two countries, Qatar and Turkey and the game went from covert to overt where the attacks and attempts to harm Egypt and KSA were intensified..
These facts have also played a role in the Awamiya clashes..
 
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Saudi army attacks and bombs Al-Awamiyeh,
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Video shows Saudi forces firing rockets at Shia homes in Awamiyah
Mon Jul 31, 2017 9:2AM
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A footage circulating on social media shows Saudi soldiers atop rooftops in Awamiyah firing a full array of weapons, including rocket-propelled grenades, at residential buildings in the besieged Shia-populated town.

More than people have been killed and many others wounded in more than 80 days of tensions in Awamiyah, as the regime continues with its heavy-handed crackdown in Eastern Province.

Awamiyah has witnessed an increase in anti-regime protests and an ensuing crackdown, with the Saudi regime pushing ahead with its controversial razing of the al-Masoura neighborhood.

Authorities claim the district's narrow streets have become a hideout for militants which they accuse of being behind attacks on security forces in Eastern Province.

Security forces equipped with heavy weapons have been deployed in Awamiyah since May 10, following fierce clashes between the regime forces and locals protesting against the destruction.

Bulldozers escorted by heavily armored military vehicles have demolished several houses, businesses and historical sites across the Shia-majority region over the past few weeks.

Ali al-Dubisi, the head of the Berlin-based European Saudi Organization for Human Rights, on Sunday expressed serious concerns over the situation in Awamiyah.

He said the regime forces were following a scorched land policy in the region, launching endless rocket attacks and shelling residential buildings and civilians there.

Residents, he said, are barricaded in their homes but they are resisting Saudi pressures to evacuate the area.

Saudi officer killed in restive Qatif

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia’s Interior Ministry said a policeman had been killed in a rocket attack in the Qatif region

A ministry statement, carried by state news agency SPA, said the officer was killed as a police patrol came under a rocket attack in al-Masoura on Sunday.

According to the statement, the attack also left six other policemen wounded. The ministry noted that the injured were hospitalized and in a stable condition.

Since February 2011, Saudi Arabia has stepped up security measures in the Shia-dominated Eastern Province, which has been rocked by anti-regime demonstrations, with protesters demanding free speech, the release of political prisoners, and an end to economic and religious discrimination.

The protests have been met with a heavy-handed crackdown by the Saudi regime. Over the past years, Riyadh has also redefined its anti-terrorism law so as to repress pro-democracy movements.

http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2017/08/02/530534/saudi-arabia-shia--awamiyah-killed
But this is residential area of old town. Seems its heavy bombing.

Inside the Saudi town that's been under siege for three months by its own government
In rare interview with Western media local activists in Awamiyah tell The Independent of shocking conditions faced by civilians in secretive battle between Riyadh and armed Shia protesters
upload_2017-8-13_18-12-16.png

Images purportedly of the town in the eastern Qatif province resemble scenes from a war zone.

When Donald Trump arrived in Saudi Arabia on his first trip abroad as US President in May, officials in Riyadh made a spectacular effort to promote the idea of unity in the Muslim world, inviting more than 100 leaders of Muslim nations to attend the Arab Islamic American Summit with the new President.

Critics pointed out that the Saudi-led coalition contributing to the misery in Yemen put paid to that idea. Even closer to home, however, the Saudi government had just begun a war on a town in the country’s restive east – a battle that is still raging despite receiving very little media coverage both within the conservative Kingdom and outside it.

Traditionally Shia, Awamiyah – a 400-year-old district in the eastern Qatif province home to around 30,000 people – has been surrounded by siege barricades put up by the security services since attempts to evict residents turned violent on 10 May.

1st pic is in #Awamia, #Qatif. 2nd is in Syria. Imagine how big the destruction #Saudi Forces made in #Awamiasiege which media doesn’t show! pic.twitter.com/vADfQyjOsm

— Angry Qatifi (@AngryQatifi) July 14, 2017


Since then, the situation has rapidly deteriorated. Locals report between 12 - 25 people have died in shelling and sniper fire, and pictures purportedly of streets covered in rubble and sewage look more like a scene from Syria than an oil-rich Gulf city.

Information from Awamiyah is difficult to verify; foreign media are not allowed near the area without government chaperones, which means the world is reliant on heavily-controlled Saudi state media, unreliable Shia-focussed news sites and social media from inside the city for even the smallest glimpse into what is going on.

Grisly photos of wounds inflicted by snipers and the destruction of homes and shops cannot be independently verified.

But the picture painted by several researchers and Saudis The Independent spoke to – including one armed protester inside the besieged city, and two peaceful pro-Awamiyah activists now living outside the country – is of an untenable humanitarian situation.

“I was a peaceful protester, most of us in Awamiyah were, until the government decided to list us as wanted terrorists. All we did was maintain calls for reform. Because we were not afraid of the regime, they targeted the whole city,” an armed anti-government activist said in a rare interview with Western media.


Government forces raided his house at the beginning of the siege, he said, beating his wife, pointing weapons at his five-year-old daughter and lifting his eight-month-old baby girl high and threatening to drop her.


“They told my little girl, ‘We will kill your father and throw his head between your legs.’


“We had no choice. Defending our lives and our women is a duty. Houses have been destroyed by bombs, heavy shooting, RPGs... everyone is a target.”


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May denies supressing report into Saudi Arabia’s funding of extremism to protect arms deals
Awamiyah was sealed off with roadblocks three months ago after the local population refused to comply with security forces bringing in bulldozers and other construction equipment on orders to demolish and redevelop the ancient neighbourhood of al-Musawara.

The region has seen periodic bouts of unrest including car bombs and attacks on the security services since Arab Spring calls for an end to discrimination against minority Shia citizens began in 2011.

Riyadh, for its part, claims that the armed protesters in Awamiyah are terrorists intent on destabilising the country as a whole, and must be stopped from using the area's abandoned buildings and winding narrow streets as hideouts.

Journalists and rights watchdogs alike are having trouble identifying who the gunmen are, where their weapons come from, and how many they number. The armed source inside declined to comment on the size or origins of the fighting force, citing security reasons.

Other pro-Awamiyah activists were vague when pressed on the subject – but agree that the push to tear down the neighbourhood is motivated by a desire to crack down on dissent for good.

“I’ve documented conflict in Saudi Arabia before but nothing like this. I’ve seen protests, but nothing this militarised,” said Adam Coogle, a Middle East researcher for Human Rights Watch.

Read more
“The details are thin on the ground but what is clear is there are heavy clashes going on between the state and its citizens in a Saudi city right now, and that’s pretty unprecedented.”

Many residents in Awamiyah are too afraid of shelling and snipers to leave their homes, despite the fact in many areas the water mains and electricity have been disconnected, leaving them without fresh water or air conditioning in the punishing summer heat.

“People are so afraid that sometimes the bodies have been left in the streets for days,” a US-based activist originally from the area said.

Ambulances and sanitation vehicles have had difficulty accessing the district after being held up at checkpoints, contributing to the unlivable conditions, several reports say.

Awamiyah was also the home of Nimr al-Nimr, an influential Shia cleric who was executed on trumped-up terrorism charges last year. His death led to demonstrations worldwide.

The current stand-off cannot be reduced to a sectarian issue, said Ali Adubasi, the Berlin-based director of activist group European Saudi Organisation of Human Rights, who himself fled the country in 2013 after being detained and tortured by the state several times.

“When they killed Sheik Nimr, they also executed four Shia and 43 Sunnis, so there is more to the situation than that.

The armored vehicles of Saudi security in #awamia. The pix were shared by the forces themselves pic.twitter.com/fJzUI3vcUk

— #AwamiaSiege2017 (@QatifRev) July 30, 2017


“I think they’d crack down the same way on any opposition area. What they want is to empty the town of people full stop, to end the protests.”

Last Friday, the Saudi authorities once again issued eviction notices for Awamiyah’s residents, instructing them to leave through two designated roads and to wave white clothing as a signal of surrender as they did so.

The order was coupled with intensified fighting which Saudi media said killed at least seven people. Activists accuse the authorities of firing randomly at civilians, their homes and cars, claims Riyadh has denied.

The US-based activist said hundreds of people have since fled – by some counts up to 90 per cent of the local population, leaving around 3,000-5,000 people inside. While some accommodation in nearby towns has been provided, it has been criticised as not nearly enough to cope with the expected demand.

In April the UN condemned the redevelopment plans, accusing the authorities of attempting to forcibly remove residents from Awamiyah without offering adequate resettlement options in an operation which threatens the “historical and cultural heritage of the town with irreparable harm”.

The outside world, however, remains largely unaware of the turmoil consuming Saudi Arabia’s east.

“This is a crisis. And no one is even aware, despite social media, despite the internet,” Mr Adubasi continued. “In Saudi Arabia if you want to repress human rights and you want to crack down on dissent it is still 100 per cent possible even in the 21st century.”

Update: In a statement provided to The Independent on 8 August, a spokesperson for the Saudi government said the houses in the al-Musawara neighbourhood were "deserted and have been unsuitable for human habitation for a long time", with residents given a voluntary choice and compensation to move. “Due to its narrow streets, the al-Musawara neighbourhood became a haven for terrorists and suspicious activities ranging from terrorism and kidnapping to selling drugs and weapons," the statement said.

"Security forces faced, and still face, resistance from these elements, while many security personnel, citizens and even residents have been killed by the terrorists."

Armed men continued to turn themselves in to the authorities, it said, adding that the situation was "completely under control of the security forces".
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...itary-government-awamiyah-qatif-a7877676.html
 
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But this is residential area of old town. Seems its heavy bombing.

Inside the Saudi town that's been under siege for three months by its own government
In rare interview with Western media local activists in Awamiyah tell The Independent of shocking conditions faced by civilians in secretive battle between Riyadh and armed Shia protesters
View attachment 418253
Images purportedly of the town in the eastern Qatif province resemble scenes from a war zone.

When Donald Trump arrived in Saudi Arabia on his first trip abroad as US President in May, officials in Riyadh made a spectacular effort to promote the idea of unity in the Muslim world, inviting more than 100 leaders of Muslim nations to attend the Arab Islamic American Summit with the new President.

Critics pointed out that the Saudi-led coalition contributing to the misery in Yemen put paid to that idea. Even closer to home, however, the Saudi government had just begun a war on a town in the country’s restive east – a battle that is still raging despite receiving very little media coverage both within the conservative Kingdom and outside it.

Traditionally Shia, Awamiyah – a 400-year-old district in the eastern Qatif province home to around 30,000 people – has been surrounded by siege barricades put up by the security services since attempts to evict residents turned violent on 10 May.

1st pic is in #Awamia, #Qatif. 2nd is in Syria. Imagine how big the destruction #Saudi Forces made in #Awamiasiege which media doesn’t show! pic.twitter.com/vADfQyjOsm

— Angry Qatifi (@AngryQatifi) July 14, 2017


Since then, the situation has rapidly deteriorated. Locals report between 12 - 25 people have died in shelling and sniper fire, and pictures purportedly of streets covered in rubble and sewage look more like a scene from Syria than an oil-rich Gulf city.

Information from Awamiyah is difficult to verify; foreign media are not allowed near the area without government chaperones, which means the world is reliant on heavily-controlled Saudi state media, unreliable Shia-focussed news sites and social media from inside the city for even the smallest glimpse into what is going on.

Grisly photos of wounds inflicted by snipers and the destruction of homes and shops cannot be independently verified.

But the picture painted by several researchers and Saudis The Independent spoke to – including one armed protester inside the besieged city, and two peaceful pro-Awamiyah activists now living outside the country – is of an untenable humanitarian situation.

“I was a peaceful protester, most of us in Awamiyah were, until the government decided to list us as wanted terrorists. All we did was maintain calls for reform. Because we were not afraid of the regime, they targeted the whole city,” an armed anti-government activist said in a rare interview with Western media.


Government forces raided his house at the beginning of the siege, he said, beating his wife, pointing weapons at his five-year-old daughter and lifting his eight-month-old baby girl high and threatening to drop her.


“They told my little girl, ‘We will kill your father and throw his head between your legs.’


“We had no choice. Defending our lives and our women is a duty. Houses have been destroyed by bombs, heavy shooting, RPGs... everyone is a target.”


Play Video
Play
0:00
/
0:44

Share
Fullscreen
May denies supressing report into Saudi Arabia’s funding of extremism to protect arms deals
Awamiyah was sealed off with roadblocks three months ago after the local population refused to comply with security forces bringing in bulldozers and other construction equipment on orders to demolish and redevelop the ancient neighbourhood of al-Musawara.

The region has seen periodic bouts of unrest including car bombs and attacks on the security services since Arab Spring calls for an end to discrimination against minority Shia citizens began in 2011.

Riyadh, for its part, claims that the armed protesters in Awamiyah are terrorists intent on destabilising the country as a whole, and must be stopped from using the area's abandoned buildings and winding narrow streets as hideouts.

Journalists and rights watchdogs alike are having trouble identifying who the gunmen are, where their weapons come from, and how many they number. The armed source inside declined to comment on the size or origins of the fighting force, citing security reasons.

Other pro-Awamiyah activists were vague when pressed on the subject – but agree that the push to tear down the neighbourhood is motivated by a desire to crack down on dissent for good.

“I’ve documented conflict in Saudi Arabia before but nothing like this. I’ve seen protests, but nothing this militarised,” said Adam Coogle, a Middle East researcher for Human Rights Watch.

Read more
“The details are thin on the ground but what is clear is there are heavy clashes going on between the state and its citizens in a Saudi city right now, and that’s pretty unprecedented.”

Many residents in Awamiyah are too afraid of shelling and snipers to leave their homes, despite the fact in many areas the water mains and electricity have been disconnected, leaving them without fresh water or air conditioning in the punishing summer heat.

“People are so afraid that sometimes the bodies have been left in the streets for days,” a US-based activist originally from the area said.

Ambulances and sanitation vehicles have had difficulty accessing the district after being held up at checkpoints, contributing to the unlivable conditions, several reports say.

Awamiyah was also the home of Nimr al-Nimr, an influential Shia cleric who was executed on trumped-up terrorism charges last year. His death led to demonstrations worldwide.

The current stand-off cannot be reduced to a sectarian issue, said Ali Adubasi, the Berlin-based director of activist group European Saudi Organisation of Human Rights, who himself fled the country in 2013 after being detained and tortured by the state several times.

“When they killed Sheik Nimr, they also executed four Shia and 43 Sunnis, so there is more to the situation than that.

The armored vehicles of Saudi security in #awamia. The pix were shared by the forces themselves pic.twitter.com/fJzUI3vcUk

— #AwamiaSiege2017 (@QatifRev) July 30, 2017


“I think they’d crack down the same way on any opposition area. What they want is to empty the town of people full stop, to end the protests.”

Last Friday, the Saudi authorities once again issued eviction notices for Awamiyah’s residents, instructing them to leave through two designated roads and to wave white clothing as a signal of surrender as they did so.

The order was coupled with intensified fighting which Saudi media said killed at least seven people. Activists accuse the authorities of firing randomly at civilians, their homes and cars, claims Riyadh has denied.

The US-based activist said hundreds of people have since fled – by some counts up to 90 per cent of the local population, leaving around 3,000-5,000 people inside. While some accommodation in nearby towns has been provided, it has been criticised as not nearly enough to cope with the expected demand.

In April the UN condemned the redevelopment plans, accusing the authorities of attempting to forcibly remove residents from Awamiyah without offering adequate resettlement options in an operation which threatens the “historical and cultural heritage of the town with irreparable harm”.

The outside world, however, remains largely unaware of the turmoil consuming Saudi Arabia’s east.

“This is a crisis. And no one is even aware, despite social media, despite the internet,” Mr Adubasi continued. “In Saudi Arabia if you want to repress human rights and you want to crack down on dissent it is still 100 per cent possible even in the 21st century.”

Update: In a statement provided to The Independent on 8 August, a spokesperson for the Saudi government said the houses in the al-Musawara neighbourhood were "deserted and have been unsuitable for human habitation for a long time", with residents given a voluntary choice and compensation to move. “Due to its narrow streets, the al-Musawara neighbourhood became a haven for terrorists and suspicious activities ranging from terrorism and kidnapping to selling drugs and weapons," the statement said.

"Security forces faced, and still face, resistance from these elements, while many security personnel, citizens and even residents have been killed by the terrorists."

Armed men continued to turn themselves in to the authorities, it said, adding that the situation was "completely under control of the security forces".
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...itary-government-awamiyah-qatif-a7877676.html

Keep your cancerous and traitorous terrorist propaganda for yourself propagandized by The Independent Toilet "Newspaper". The 100's terrorists were crushed like dogs and their terrorist operation areas were raised to the ground. Every terrorist dog and traitor that terrorizes any inch of KSA and attacks its sons and daughters serving the state or its inhabitant (civilians) or peaceful expats, will pay the highest price.

Those few terrorists should be lucky that the security forces were the ones dealing with them as a few armed tribes would have skinned the terrorist traitors alive if given the chance. I would have taken part myself.

This tiny city, if necessary, will be erased to the ground, if terrorists continue to take it hostage. Al-Awamiyah has long been not only been a terrorist nest but also a crime nest in KSA. The only unstable city in otherwise one of the most peaceful and crime-free countries in the world.

KSA does not tolerate such behavior or such scenes which seem a familiar sight in many other countries.
 
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Keep your cancerous and traitorous terrorist propaganda for yourself. The 100's terrorists were crushed like dogs and their terrorist operation areas were raised to the ground. Every terrorist dog and traitor that terrorizes any inch of KSA and attacks its sons and daughters serving the state or its inhabitant (civilians) or peaceful expats, will pay the highest price.

This tiny city, if necessary, should be erased to the ground, if terrorists continue to take it hostage. Al-Awamiyah has long been not only a terrorist nest but also a crime nest in KSA. The only unstable city in otherwise one of the most peaceful and crime-free countries in the world.
West perceive in different way in the absence of free media in KSA.
 
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West perceive in different way in the absence of free media in KSA.

I don't care what foreigners and non-Arabs perceive of anything in a country that they have no clue about or in this case, a city and the highly successful anti-terrorist operation in this crime-ridden town.

Miserable people like you who support those terrorists, would get a seizure, if they knew that all locals left this neighborhood ages ago and that ALL the native clerics have condemned the terrorists and they along with all the most important personalities of the city, support the security forces in their fight against terrorism and treason.

BTW those same terrorists that you are now crying for, have killed Pakistani expats but continue to embarrass yourself. I don't care but rest assured that they have been dealt with and new ones will be dealt with as well. They are no challenge. 1 clan armed with swords would deal with them.

Saudi child, Pakistani expat killed in Qatif terror attack
Mohammed Al-Sulami | Published — Saturday 13 May 2017

JEDDAH: A Saudi child and a Pakistani man were killed and 10 injured when armed assailants fired at company workers carrying out a development project, then at bystanders and passers-by in Qatif in the Eastern Province.
The suspects, who fled the scene, also targeted company vehicles with explosives. The aim was to obstruct the demolition of abandoned old houses in Al-Masoura district, which terrorists used as hideouts and dens for criminal activities including kidnapping and drug-peddling.
Policemen arrived at the scene and exchanged fire with the assailants, who then started shooting heavily and randomly, killing and injuring members of the public.
Al-Masoura is one of the town’s oldest areas, with some of its buildings more than 100 years old.
The area contains unplanned buildings, and the development project entails the demolition of 488 residential units, and construction of shopping centers, restaurants, residential towers and a cultural center.
The Interior Ministry said security forces will continue their duty to enforce the law so as to guarantee the continuation of the project.
The ministry praised people who cooperated with the security forces. It urged everyone to stay away from the project area and the roads leading to it for their own safety. The ministry also called on the suspects to surrender themselves to the authorities.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1098626/saudi-arabia

This is what I wrote back then:

إنا لله وإنا إليه راجعون

Cancer cells in Al-Awamiyah (the only unsafe city in KSA and the most crime-ridden in a otherwise very crime-free country) at it again. I have no doubt in my mind that the cancer cells behind this hideous attack against innocents and construction workers who tried to improve their city will be captured, killed or sentenced to death as usual.

I wish a speedy recovery to the wounded. They will have justice.

The 2 year old Saudi Arabian toddler who died in this cowardly terrorist attack:

C_oVFreXsAItJ7G.jpg


Soon those guys below will deal with the rats:


C_phFCwXoAQ6rNP.jpg


Two, including infant, killed after terror shootout in Saudi Arabia’s Qatif

Staff writer, Al Arabiya English
Friday, 12 May 2017

Two people, including an infant, were killed and 10 others wounded after terrorists shot at workers at a development project in the eastern Qatif governorate and left the scene, Al Arabiya News Channel reported.

The incident took place at Al-Masoura neighborhood in Al-Awamiya town in Qatif on Friday.

A Saudi interior ministry spokesperson said that the terrorists fired indiscriminately and heavily at passers-by killing a two-year-old Saudi national, a Pakistani resident.

2025fffe-cc50-4c3e-9378-822312439cd5.jpg

The shooting also damaged construction equipment for the demolition of dilapidated houses. (Supplied)

Ten people including six Saudi nationals were wounded in the attacks. The injured include a woman and two children, a Sudanese national, an Indian national who is in a critical condition, in addition to four security men who suffered minor injuries.

The Saudi Ministry of interior added that the terrorist elements targeted development projects in Qatif province, where they confronted shooters hiding in the neighborhood.

The spokesperson added that workers of the company executing one of the development projects in the district of Al-Masoura in the province of Qatif were subjected to heavy firing by the terrorists.

The attack targeted the project with explosive devices to obstruct its development.

The terrorists were staying in abandoned houses and used the Al-Masoura neighborhood as a base to execute kidnappings and attacks on innocent citizens.

The Saudi interior also praised the people of Al-Awamiya who cooperated with the security forces. At the same time they called upon everyone to stay away from the project area and the roads leading to it for their own safety.

The ministry also called on the culprits to surrender themselves to the authorities and confirmed that one of the wanted men was killed during the confrontations.


Last Update: Saturday, 13 May 2017 KSA 15:58 - GMT 12:58

https://english.alarabiya.net/en/Ne...-killed-after-terror-shoot-out-in-Qutaif.html

How little Jawad got killed in Awamiya attacks
327f59e9-2f29-4e90-8e4e-251c4d22b30f_16x9_788x442.jpg

Jawad al-Dagher, a Saudi child killed in attacks targeting al-Awamiya in the center of Qatif, on Friday. (Supplied)

By Staff writer, Al Arabiya English Friday, 12 May 2017

Terrorists ended the life of Saudi infant, Jawad al-Dagher, who was only three years old as they fired indiscriminately at Al-Awamiya in the center of Qatif, on Friday.

The attack was intended to stop the development project adopted in the area.

A serious injury to the head ended Jawad’s life amid the screams of his mother who could not believe what happened.


The attack was intended to stop the development project. (Supplied)

More shots were fired at the site by a number of terrorists which injured 10 people, including a women and other residents and security personnel.


The shooting also damaged construction equipment for the demolition of dilapidated houses. (Supplied)

The shooting also damaged construction equipment for the demolition of dilapidated houses in the neighborhood. The neighborhood was the site of the latest security operation to eliminate wanted Walid al-Arid.

In a bid to stop them, the project's execution company asked the security agencies to protect them in order to carry out their duties by removing the houses and stopping their recurrent crimes in the area.

Last Update: Saturday, 13 May 2017 KSA 23:21 - GMT 20:21

https://english.alarabiya.net/en/Ne...ttle-Jawad-got-killed-in-Awamiya-attacks.html

My blood is boiling. I would skin those bastards alive. We want the cancerous terrorists beheaded heads to be displayed in public for all as a warning. As with the worst criminals.

Something like this from a few years ago in Jazan. A gang of Yemeni drug dealers, armed robbers and murderers received this treatment and since then no such incidents have occurred.



If the crime levels and small terrorist attacks against security forces and now civilians continue, certain neighborhoods in this small city should be razed to the ground. Some locals are aiding those local terrorists and if the security forces cannot deal with them (they so far have done a good job and I have no doubt that this will continue), the people (locals and non-locals) are waiting to deal with them.

After yesterday my patience has ended. We cannot afford another toddler and peaceful expat to lose his life to such cancers. No, what we need to do is to strike even harder next time and completely annihilate them and their supporters. No prisoners should be taken. Make an example out of them.

EP Shiite scholars plead with terrorists to give up arms
MOHAMMED AL-SULAMI | Published — Wednesday 24 May 2017
917006-1963419215.jpg

Saudi Shiites gather during an occasion in the coastal town of Qatif, Eastern Province, in this file photo. (AFP)

JEDDAH: A group of Shiite scholars in the Eastern Province has condemned recent attacks on the Kingdom’s security officers and citizens. In a statement, eight senior clerics expressed concern over the violent incidents in Awwamiyah, condemning terrorism and the use of weapons.
They demanded terrorists put down their weapons and surrender.
They said the use of violence is neither legal nor is it a feasible way to solve problems. Terrorism only complicates matters, undermines stability and threatens the interests of the country and its people, they added.
They emphasized that the country’s security and governance are the responsibility of the state, and called on young people to abandon violence and resort to peace and dialogue to demand their rights.
These officials do what they deem right to run the affairs of citizens, especially the people of Awwamiyah, who are the center of attention in the development of Al-Masurah neighborhood, which commenced after homeowners were duly compensated.
The scholars emphasized the importance of communication between authorities and the Awwamiyah residents in order to solve problems as the state is committed to taking care of citizens’ interests.
They appealed to leading figures of the town to play an active role in finding solutions to people’s problems there.
They said in the statement: “We condemn the mobilization of the sectarian media by certain social networking sites,” asserting that the anti-cybercrime law will be strictly implemented against whoever exploits the events for sectarian gains.
The statement expressed the views of eight scholars of the Eastern Province — Sheikh Abdullah Al-Khunaizi, Ali Al-Nasser, Sheikh Mansour Al-Salman, Sheikh Hassan Al-Saffar, Sheikh Abdulkareem Al-Hebail, Sheikh Yusuf Al-Mahdi, Sheikh Ghaleb Al-Hammad, and Sheikh Hassan Al-Khuwaildi.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1103926/saudi-arabia

A nice initiative and not really surprising as it once again confirms the strong social fabric of KSA. Contrary to popular belief KSA is home (indigenously) to one of the most diverse groups of Muslims in the world in terms of Islamic communities and sects. We have large populations of indigenous Hanbalis, Shafi'i's, Malikis, Hanafis, Sufis, Twelvers, Zaydis and Ismailis. All living peacefully without any sectarianism or regional hatred outside of very sporadic incidents on social media and even more rare in person. Not all this can be attributed to a strong security apparatus as this was also the case when KSA was a much weaker country internally.

We often hear, especially in Western and Iranian media, that the Eastern Province (which is falsely claimed to be a majority Shia (Twelver) province, which is not the case although Shias make up around 1/3 of the population) is a Shia majority Province but this is mainly restricted to the Qatif region. In that historical region the population is one of the most well-to-do communities in KSA. In general Shias in KSA (at least the non-Southern Zaydis and Ismailis) have the highest living standards of any Shias in the Muslim world.

Not only that most are incredibly patriotic people, albeit a portion of them disagree with the state-funded and dominant Hanbali clergy. Basically the only troublesome area of KSA in terms of unrest and crime (in a otherwise very crime-free country) is one small city (overall) called Al-Awamiyah as explained in post 2 in this thread. This is also the home city of the Al-Nimr family. Basically it is a big lose for the minority of violent troublemakers in that city that even clerics within their city are clearly against them.

The recent attack and killing of 1 innocent LOCAL toddler and 1 Pakistani expat, gives those troublemakers no favors but only more hatred from the locals who helped catch them. Not only that their opposition to the improvement of infrastructure in Al-Awamiyah also runs counter to the wishes of the locals.

Like all people who resort to violence and terrorism against locals and fellow countrymen, they will eventually lose all support aside from among a tiny hardcore element. Especially in a small city such as Al-Awamiyah and in a country where Shia Twelvers are clearly outnumbered and where there is zero tolerance for a Wilayat al-Faqih Mullah theocratic republic. It is simply a doomed project beforehand that will lead to nothing but mistrust and possibly dislike that will impact innocents in Al-Awamiyah when they will look for employment outside of their city. That city already has a bad reputation due to the crime there so no need to make it any worse. The government could have used a much harsher policy ages ago to deal with such elements in that city but our government is thankfully not a stupid government like for instance other regional ones such as Al-Assad whose policies would have caused a civil war in that region.

If those violent troublemakers/terrorists disagree with certain things they should chose the way of dialogue and try to obtain the support of their community which in turn could open a dialogue with other communities in the country and solve the differences together if possible.​

No destruction of any mosque either. However any mosque that has photos of a well-known executed traitor (Nimr al-Nimr) should face closure.

Luckily this is limited to a small neighborhood of 1 small city (25.000 big) called Al-Awamiyyah. This neighborhood has already been cleared from terrorists.

DF7G1uFXcAEUOUS.jpg



DGzE0i8WsAAe743.jpg:large


Sectarianism does not work inside KSA. Attempts at fueling such feelings have been futile and will remain so.

Traitorous terrorists will forever be under the soles of our shoes:

DGvJDLkXoAA0gGq.jpg
 
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I don't care what foreigners and non-Arabs perceive of anything in a country that they have no clue about or in this case, a city and the highly successful anti-terrorist operation in this crime-ridden town.

Miserable people like you who support those terrorists, would get a seizure, if they knew that all locals left this neighborhood ages ago and that ALL the native clerics have condemned the terrorists and they along with all the most important personalities of the city, support the security forces in their fight against terrorism and treason.

BTW those same terrorists that you are now crying for, have killed Pakistani expats but continue to embarrass yourself. I don't care but rest assured that they have been dealt with and new ones will be dealt with as well. They are no challenge. 1 clan armed with swords would deal with them.

Saudi child, Pakistani expat killed in Qatif terror attack
Mohammed Al-Sulami | Published — Saturday 13 May 2017

JEDDAH: A Saudi child and a Pakistani man were killed and 10 injured when armed assailants fired at company workers carrying out a development project, then at bystanders and passers-by in Qatif in the Eastern Province.
The suspects, who fled the scene, also targeted company vehicles with explosives. The aim was to obstruct the demolition of abandoned old houses in Al-Masoura district, which terrorists used as hideouts and dens for criminal activities including kidnapping and drug-peddling.
Policemen arrived at the scene and exchanged fire with the assailants, who then started shooting heavily and randomly, killing and injuring members of the public.
Al-Masoura is one of the town’s oldest areas, with some of its buildings more than 100 years old.
The area contains unplanned buildings, and the development project entails the demolition of 488 residential units, and construction of shopping centers, restaurants, residential towers and a cultural center.
The Interior Ministry said security forces will continue their duty to enforce the law so as to guarantee the continuation of the project.
The ministry praised people who cooperated with the security forces. It urged everyone to stay away from the project area and the roads leading to it for their own safety. The ministry also called on the suspects to surrender themselves to the authorities.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1098626/saudi-arabia

This is what I wrote back then:

إنا لله وإنا إليه راجعون

Cancer cells in Al-Awamiyah (the only unsafe city in KSA and the most crime-ridden in a otherwise very crime-free country) at it again. I have no doubt in my mind that the cancer cells behind this hideous attack against innocents and construction workers who tried to improve their city will be captured, killed or sentenced to death as usual.

I wish a speedy recovery to the wounded. They will have justice.

The 2 year old Saudi Arabian toddler who died in this cowardly terrorist attack:

C_oVFreXsAItJ7G.jpg


Soon those guys below will deal with the rats:


C_phFCwXoAQ6rNP.jpg


Two, including infant, killed after terror shootout in Saudi Arabia’s Qatif

Staff writer, Al Arabiya English
Friday, 12 May 2017

Two people, including an infant, were killed and 10 others wounded after terrorists shot at workers at a development project in the eastern Qatif governorate and left the scene, Al Arabiya News Channel reported.

The incident took place at Al-Masoura neighborhood in Al-Awamiya town in Qatif on Friday.

A Saudi interior ministry spokesperson said that the terrorists fired indiscriminately and heavily at passers-by killing a two-year-old Saudi national, a Pakistani resident.

2025fffe-cc50-4c3e-9378-822312439cd5.jpg

The shooting also damaged construction equipment for the demolition of dilapidated houses. (Supplied)

Ten people including six Saudi nationals were wounded in the attacks. The injured include a woman and two children, a Sudanese national, an Indian national who is in a critical condition, in addition to four security men who suffered minor injuries.

The Saudi Ministry of interior added that the terrorist elements targeted development projects in Qatif province, where they confronted shooters hiding in the neighborhood.

The spokesperson added that workers of the company executing one of the development projects in the district of Al-Masoura in the province of Qatif were subjected to heavy firing by the terrorists.

The attack targeted the project with explosive devices to obstruct its development.

The terrorists were staying in abandoned houses and used the Al-Masoura neighborhood as a base to execute kidnappings and attacks on innocent citizens.

The Saudi interior also praised the people of Al-Awamiya who cooperated with the security forces. At the same time they called upon everyone to stay away from the project area and the roads leading to it for their own safety.

The ministry also called on the culprits to surrender themselves to the authorities and confirmed that one of the wanted men was killed during the confrontations.


Last Update: Saturday, 13 May 2017 KSA 15:58 - GMT 12:58

https://english.alarabiya.net/en/Ne...-killed-after-terror-shoot-out-in-Qutaif.html

How little Jawad got killed in Awamiya attacks
327f59e9-2f29-4e90-8e4e-251c4d22b30f_16x9_788x442.jpg

Jawad al-Dagher, a Saudi child killed in attacks targeting al-Awamiya in the center of Qatif, on Friday. (Supplied)

By Staff writer, Al Arabiya English Friday, 12 May 2017

Terrorists ended the life of Saudi infant, Jawad al-Dagher, who was only three years old as they fired indiscriminately at Al-Awamiya in the center of Qatif, on Friday.

The attack was intended to stop the development project adopted in the area.

A serious injury to the head ended Jawad’s life amid the screams of his mother who could not believe what happened.


The attack was intended to stop the development project. (Supplied)

More shots were fired at the site by a number of terrorists which injured 10 people, including a women and other residents and security personnel.


The shooting also damaged construction equipment for the demolition of dilapidated houses. (Supplied)

The shooting also damaged construction equipment for the demolition of dilapidated houses in the neighborhood. The neighborhood was the site of the latest security operation to eliminate wanted Walid al-Arid.

In a bid to stop them, the project's execution company asked the security agencies to protect them in order to carry out their duties by removing the houses and stopping their recurrent crimes in the area.

Last Update: Saturday, 13 May 2017 KSA 23:21 - GMT 20:21

https://english.alarabiya.net/en/Ne...ttle-Jawad-got-killed-in-Awamiya-attacks.html

My blood is boiling. I would skin those bastards alive. We want the cancerous terrorists beheaded heads to be displayed in public for all as a warning. As with the worst criminals.

Something like this from a few years ago in Jazan. A gang of Yemeni drug dealers, armed robbers and murderers received this treatment and since then no such incidents have occurred.



If the crime levels and small terrorist attacks against security forces and now civilians continue, certain neighborhoods in this small city should be razed to the ground. Some locals are aiding those local terrorists and if the security forces cannot deal with them (they so far have done a good job and I have no doubt that this will continue), the people (locals and non-locals) are waiting to deal with them.

After yesterday my patience has ended. We cannot afford another toddler and peaceful expat to lose his life to such cancers. No, what we need to do is to strike even harder next time and completely annihilate them and their supporters. No prisoners should be taken. Make an example out of them.

EP Shiite scholars plead with terrorists to give up arms
MOHAMMED AL-SULAMI | Published — Wednesday 24 May 2017
917006-1963419215.jpg

Saudi Shiites gather during an occasion in the coastal town of Qatif, Eastern Province, in this file photo. (AFP)

JEDDAH: A group of Shiite scholars in the Eastern Province has condemned recent attacks on the Kingdom’s security officers and citizens. In a statement, eight senior clerics expressed concern over the violent incidents in Awwamiyah, condemning terrorism and the use of weapons.
They demanded terrorists put down their weapons and surrender.
They said the use of violence is neither legal nor is it a feasible way to solve problems. Terrorism only complicates matters, undermines stability and threatens the interests of the country and its people, they added.
They emphasized that the country’s security and governance are the responsibility of the state, and called on young people to abandon violence and resort to peace and dialogue to demand their rights.
These officials do what they deem right to run the affairs of citizens, especially the people of Awwamiyah, who are the center of attention in the development of Al-Masurah neighborhood, which commenced after homeowners were duly compensated.
The scholars emphasized the importance of communication between authorities and the Awwamiyah residents in order to solve problems as the state is committed to taking care of citizens’ interests.
They appealed to leading figures of the town to play an active role in finding solutions to people’s problems there.
They said in the statement: “We condemn the mobilization of the sectarian media by certain social networking sites,” asserting that the anti-cybercrime law will be strictly implemented against whoever exploits the events for sectarian gains.
The statement expressed the views of eight scholars of the Eastern Province — Sheikh Abdullah Al-Khunaizi, Ali Al-Nasser, Sheikh Mansour Al-Salman, Sheikh Hassan Al-Saffar, Sheikh Abdulkareem Al-Hebail, Sheikh Yusuf Al-Mahdi, Sheikh Ghaleb Al-Hammad, and Sheikh Hassan Al-Khuwaildi.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1103926/saudi-arabia

A nice initiative and not really surprising as it once again confirms the strong social fabric of KSA. Contrary to popular belief KSA is home (indigenously) to one of the most diverse groups of Muslims in the world in terms of Islamic communities and sects. We have large populations of indigenous Hanbalis, Shafi'i's, Malikis, Hanafis, Sufis, Twelvers, Zaydis and Ismailis. All living peacefully without any sectarianism or regional hatred outside of very sporadic incidents on social media and even more rare in person. Not all this can be attributed to a strong security apparatus as this was also the case when KSA was a much weaker country internally.

We often hear, especially in Western and Iranian media, that the Eastern Province (which is falsely claimed to be a majority Shia (Twelver) province, which is not the case although Shias make up around 1/3 of the population) is a Shia majority Province but this is mainly restricted to the Qatif region. In that historical region the population is one of the most well-to-do communities in KSA. In general Shias in KSA (at least the non-Southern Zaydis and Ismailis) have the highest living standards of any Shias in the Muslim world.

Not only that most are incredibly patriotic people, albeit a portion of them disagree with the state-funded and dominant Hanbali clergy. Basically the only troublesome area of KSA in terms of unrest and crime (in a otherwise very crime-free country) is one small city (overall) called Al-Awamiyah as explained in post 2 in this thread. This is also the home city of the Al-Nimr family. Basically it is a big lose for the minority of violent troublemakers in that city that even clerics within their city are clearly against them.

The recent attack and killing of 1 innocent LOCAL toddler and 1 Pakistani expat, gives those troublemakers no favors but only more hatred from the locals who helped catch them. Not only that their opposition to the improvement of infrastructure in Al-Awamiyah also runs counter to the wishes of the locals.

Like all people who resort to violence and terrorism against locals and fellow countrymen, they will eventually lose all support aside from among a tiny hardcore element. Especially in a small city such as Al-Awamiyah and in a country where Shia Twelvers are clearly outnumbered and where there is zero tolerance for a Wilayat al-Faqih Mullah theocratic republic. It is simply a doomed project beforehand that will lead to nothing but mistrust and possibly dislike that will impact innocents in Al-Awamiyah when they will look for employment outside of their city. That city already has a bad reputation due to the crime there so no need to make it any worse. The government could have used a much harsher policy ages ago to deal with such elements in that city but our government is thankfully not a stupid government like for instance other regional ones such as Al-Assad whose policies would have caused a civil war in that region.

If those violent troublemakers/terrorists disagree with certain things they should chose the way of dialogue and try to obtain the support of their community which in turn could open a dialogue with other communities in the country and solve the differences together if possible.​

No destruction of any mosque either. However any mosque that has photos of a well-known executed traitor (Nimr al-Nimr) should face closure.

Luckily this is limited to a small neighborhood of 1 small city (25.000 big) called Al-Awamiyyah. This neighborhood has already been cleared from terrorists.

DF7G1uFXcAEUOUS.jpg



DGzE0i8WsAAe743.jpg:large


Sectarianism does not work inside KSA. Attempts at fueling such feelings have been futile and will remain so.

Traitorous terrorists will forever be under the soles of our shoes:

DGvJDLkXoAA0gGq.jpg
Try to own your people. Its you media who publishing picture of destroyed shia mosque. Not me. Miserable is your King and kingdom who are using fire power against its own people. Who has no manner to negotiate with there own tribes and people of their own culture. And yes whole world point finger at KSA after 911 due to miserable condition of your govt who's own officials found guilty in 911 report (28 pages).
 
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Try to own your people. Its you media who publishing picture of destroyed shia mosque. Not me. Miserable is your King and kingdom who are using fire power against its own people. Who has no manner to negotiate with there own tribes and people of their own culture. And yes whole world point finger at KSA after 911 due to miserable condition of your govt who's own officials found guilty in 911 report (28 pages).

Try to learn English. You have apparently lived in the US for 20 + years. It's about time to make yourself understandable.

More blabbering.

I don't care if it is is a mosque, a rest room or a palace. If terrorists are using it as a base to conduct terrorist attacks against civilians and security forces, it is a legitimate target. While don't you cry about the numerous mosques that are destroyed in Syria and Iraq by those two governments, ISIS, coalition bombings etc.? You are crying about one partially destroyed mosque in one small town. Pathetic.

You have no idea what you are blabbering about. Every historical region in KSA is unique and it retains its customs, traditions, architecture, cuisine, traditional dress, dialects, religious sects etc. Nobody is bothering them/us. However terrorism and treason are not tolerated and won't ever be by any sane country or people.

Yes, I am heartbroken that 15 Saudi Arabians (many of Yemeni origins) took part in a terrorist attack 16 years ago out of millions upon millions of Saudi Arabians based in the West (students, businessmen, citizens, temporary visitors, tourists) etc since the late 1960's. To date no other Saudi Arabians, before or after, have been involved in any terrorist attacks in the West whether in Northern America or Europe. Try harder.

No such guilt either. KSA (government) was cleared for the 100th time by successive US courts, FBI reports and CIA reports. Try harder. Not only that OBL (himself the son of a Yemeni migrant and a Syrian mother) was rendered stateless by KSA way back (1994) before Al-Qaeda had committed a single terrorist attack. Al-Qaeda was banned in KSA long before it was banned anywhere else despite it being founded abroad.


Speaking about shame, are you ashamed of a few Pakistanis (Khalid Sheikh Muhammad being one of them) playing an active role in the 9/11, that 3 of the 4 7/7 suicide bombers were Pakistanis, or the 100's of Pakistani pedophile ring members caught in the UK throughout the ages, including those recently etc.? We can play that kind of games and with all due respect, I believe that you would objectively speaking win this battle hands down due to sheer numbers among other factors.

BTW all this is irrelevant as there are black sheep in every nation. You know including those few terrorists dealt with in Awamiyya that you seem to have a hard on for.

Speaking about OBL, can you please tell me which country he was found living in and where he was killed? Something about being located next to a large Pakistani military base. Or what was that about exactly?

Try harder miserable troll and stick to your nonsense. It will never change the ground realities.

P.S: I should correct myself. A Hussainiya is not a mosque so technically no mosque involved. Not only that, if that mosque/hussainiya has posters of traitors and terrorists, it cannot be considered a mosque but rather a terrorist hub.

@HAIDER
 
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Try to learn English. You have apparently lived in the US for 20 + years. It's about time to make yourself understandable.

More blabbering.

I don't care if it is is a mosque, a rest room or a palace. If terrorists are using it as a base to conduct terrorist attacks against civilians and security forces, it is a legitimate target. While don't you cry about the numerous mosques that are destroyed in Syria and Iraq by those two governments, ISIS, coalition bombings etc.? You are crying about one partially destroyed mosque in one small town. Pathetic.

You have no idea what you are blabbering about. Every historical region in KSA is unique and it retains its customs, traditions, architecture, cuisine, traditional dress, dialects, religious sects etc. Nobody is bothering them/us. However terrorism and treason are not tolerated and won't ever be by any sane country or people.

Yes, I am heartbroken that 15 Saudi Arabians (many of Yemeni origins) took part in a terrorist attack 16 years ago out of millions upon millions of Saudi Arabians based in the West (students, businessmen, citizens, temporary visitors, tourists) etc since the late 1960's. To date no other Saudi Arabians, before or after, have been involved in any terrorist attacks in the West whether in Northern America or Europe. Try harder.

No such guilt either. KSA (government) was cleared for the 100th time by successive US courts, FBI reports and CIA reports. Try harder. Not only that OBL (himself the son of a Yemeni migrant and a Syrian mother) was rendered stateless by KSA way back (1994) before Al-Qaeda had committed a single terrorist attack. Al-Qaeda was banned in KSA long before it was banned anywhere else despite it being founded abroad.


Try harder miserable troll and stick to your nonsense. It will never change the ground realities.
I believe you ... and whole world too.
 
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I believe you ... and whole world too.

What some irrelevant average Joe believes in or not does not matter. Never mattered and never will. What matters are the facts on the ground and actual decisions having taking place by the relevant authorities (US government, CIA, FBI). If you did not understand what I wrote or missed some details I suggest rereading my post 117. Everything is explained and you are free to challenge any of the content by using facts. However I am afraid that you will not succeed.

Your reply in itself is self-explanatory.

Lastly I am not trying to convince anyone of anything here. Such endeavors are a waste of time. However I will at all times counter falsehood and nonsense if I see it. Not only that I know what is going on in Awamiyya from close hand. I don't need some ridiculous Independent Toilet paper article unlike you and other foreigners who have no clue about the ground realities in KSA. Can't even speak Arabic yet pretend to be living professors.

That's like me trying to be a expert on Burmese affairs by reading the Independent or seeing what some Bangladeshis based in the UK are saying. A joke.

# URGENT: Security forces respond to citizens' reports of terrorists and storm a building in the Awamiya full of weapons and arrest a number of suspects

Acting Secretary of the Charqia at an international press conference:
800-900 Million riyals is the size of the compensations for houses in "Qatif Masoura neighbourhood."

https://sabq.org/الملا-المدة-الزمني...سورة-سنتين-بعد-الانتهاء-من-إزالة-جميع-المباني

Great. May the hunting continue.
 
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