publish time

17/07/2024

author name Arab Times
visit count

3606 times read

publish time

17/07/2024

visit count

3606 times read

KUWAIT CITY, July 17, (Agencies): The State of Kuwait praises the measures taken by the competent authorities in the sisterly Sultanate of Oman in the wake of the deadly shooting attack at a mosque in Al-Wadi Al-Kabeer area, a statement from the Kuwaiti Ministry of Foreign Affairs said on Tuesday.

The State of Kuwait, firmly opposed to all forms of violence, reaffirms support to the Omani authorities in whatever measures they might adopt to protect the security and safety of the Sultanate. The State of Kuwait expresses sincere condolences to the victims of the tragic incident and wishes those wounded a quick recovery, the statement added.

Secretary-General of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Jasem al-Budaiwi deplored Tuesday, in the strongest terms, al-Wadi al- Kabir neighborhood shooting incident in the Omani capital of Muscat. He stressed that the GCC member states are fully standing by the Sultanate of Oman, lauding at the same time efforts of the country’s security personnel in dealing with the incident. He expressed his heartfelt condolences to the families of the victims, wishing a rapid recovery to those wounded.

Al-Budaiwi prayed to Allah the Almighty to maintain security and stability in the Sultanate. Earlier in the day, the Sultanate announced that the shooting led to the killing of a police officer and the three attackers, and the wounding of 28 persons from different nationalities.

The Arab League also condemned the gun incident that took place in the al-Wadi al-Kabeer neighborhood in Oman’s capital, Muscat. In a statement, the Cairo-based League affirmed full solidarity with the Sultanate of Oman in all step and measures taken by the country to maintain its security and stability.

The League expressed its sympathy to the Sultanate, its government and people as well as the families of the victims, wishing a rapid recovery to those wounded.

Several gunmen burst into a Shiite mosque in the Gulf Arab state of Oman and opened fire, killing six people and wounding nearly 30 more, authorities said Tuesday, stunning the peaceful sultanate and making it the country’s deadliest such attack in recent memory. The Islamic State extremist group, through an affiliated news agency, claimed responsibility for the attack in the capital, Muscat, without providing evidence. It marked the first time that the Sunni Muslim extremist group has asserted responsibility for an attack in Oman.

That the Islamic State, which considers Shiites to be heretics, targeted Shiite worshippers on the eve of their holy day is nothing new - the group in January claimed responsibility for an attack in Shiite-majority Iran that killed 84 people. Most shocking, analysts say, is that the attack happened in Oman, a quiet country on the southeastern edge of the Arabian peninsula with well-trained security forces, a policy of non-intervention and a majority population of Ibadi Muslims, a more liberal offshoot of Islam predating the Sunni-Shiite split. “It illustrates that ISIS thinks outside of the box and tries to do things that most people think wouldn’t be possible, taking advantage of small failures within security architectures of different countries,” said Aaron Y. Zelin, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

There is no known branch of the Islamic State in Oman, a country that tends to stay out of the sectarian disputes roiling the wider region. But Islamic extremists, including branches of the Islamic State and al-Qaida, have a foothold in neighboring war-torn Yemen. The Royal Oman Police said the shooting killed five worshippers in the mosque in Muscat’s Wadi Kabir neighborhood and one police officer. Omani authorities did not specify the number of gunmen or provide their nationalities but said security forces had killed three attackers. At least 28 people were wounded in the shooting, Omani police added, among them officers and medics. The mosque was packed with worshippers holding special prayers on the eve of the Shiite mourning festival of Ashoura, which marks the 7th century martyrdom of the Prophet Muhammad’s (PBUH) grandson, Hussein (may Allah be pleased with him), at Karbala in modern-day Iraq. Pakistan identified four of the dead as its citizens.

Analysts described the rare shooting as the latest example that the Islamic State, after losing its territory in Iraq and Syria some five years ago, is seeking to strike farther afield. “It’s part of their reorganization from being a group with most of its actions in Iraq and Syria to using their resources in a global network,” Zelin said, citing the deadly attack in March on a Moscow concert hall and other bombings claimed by the group’s regional affiliate, Islamic State Khorasan, across Afghanistan and Pakistan. “It makes them more resilient in some ways.” The U.S. Embassy in Muscat issued a security alert, warning citizens to “stay vigilant.” Like other sheikhdoms in the Arabian Gulf, Oman retains tight controls on traditional media. Its state news agencies on Tuesday praised authorities’ success in containing the chaos but offered scant information about the state of investigations or the attack itself.

In an interview with the Times of Oman, an English-language daily, an unidentified Pakistani worshipper at the mosque described scenes of fear and mayhem and reported that gunfire - both the attack and subsequent shootout with Omani police - lasted some hour and a half. Statements of condolence and outrage came from around the region, where Oman plays a sensitive role. The sultanate maintains friendly relations both with Saudi Arabia, the heartland of traditionalist Sunni Islam, and its regional rival, the Shiite power Iran. The Iranian Foreign Ministry said it stood “in solidarity with Oman against such attempts to sow discord.” Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said he was “deeply saddened” by the shooting and offered Pakistan’s help in the investigation.