Saudi Arabia
has deployed 100,000 security personnel to oversee the annual Islamic
hajj pilgrimage that begins on Tuesday, the Interior Ministry spokesman
said, underscoring both the massive arrangements needed to secure one of
the largest pilgrimages in the world and the multitude of threats the
hajj faces.
"We always concentrate on hajj considering that a threat might exist,"
Maj. Gen. Mansour al-Turki said. "We've been targeted by terrorism for
years now and we know that we are a target for terrorist groups."
Al-Turki spoke exclusively to The Associated Press on Saturday from the
Interior Ministry's security headquarters for the hajj, located in the
sprawling tent city of Mina just a few miles outside the Grand Mosque in
Mecca that houses Islam's holiest site, the cube-shaped Kaaba.
Roughly 3 million people from around the world are expected to converge
at the Kaaba, in Mina and other nearby areas for the hajj, which lasts
about five days. It is series of rituals meant to cleanse the soul of
sins and instill a sense of equality and brotherhood. All able-bodied
Muslims are required to perform the hajj once in their lives.
Members of an elite counterterrorism unit, traffic police and emergency
civil defense personnel are among those deployed to help with crowd
control and safety. They are supported by additional troops from the
army and national guard, al-Turki said.
Inside the Interior Ministry's nerve center, police monitor dozens of
screens with feeds from about 5,000 CCTV cameras installed throughout
Mecca and Medina, the two cities frequented by pilgrims.
"We're active, we're awake," al-Turki said, referring to the security forces' readiness to deal with any eventuality.
Civil defense emergency personnel were among the first responders when a
crane collapsed at the Grand Mosque on Sept. 11, killing 111 people and
injuring nearly 400 others who had come for the hajj. Authorities
blamed the collapse on high winds and the contractor was faulted for not
following operating procedures.
On Thursday, the kingdom's military and police put on a parade in Mecca,
with security forces jumping through burning hoops and thwarting a mock
terrorist attack. The show was aimed at deterring any would-be
troublemakers, and was attended by Crown Prince and Interior Minister
Mohammed bin Nayef, who himself was the target of a terrorist attack in
2009.
Saudi Arabia's custodianship of holy sites in Mecca and Medina has long
made the kingdom a target of terrorist groups who want to wrestle
control of them from the kingdom's Western-allied monarchy.
The pilgrimage this year comes as Saudi Arabia faces an expansion of
Islamic State group attacks. Two Saudi suicide bombers targeted Shiite
pilgrims in eastern Saudi Arabia in May, and a Saudi suicide bomber
carried out a third attack in June in neighboring Kuwait. The attacks,
which killed 53 people, were claimed by an IS affiliate calling itself
"Najd Province," the traditional name for the central heartland of the
peninsula.
An IS-claimed suicide bombing last month in Abha, 350 miles south of
Mecca, killed 15 people inside a mosque in a police compound. It was the
deadliest attack on the kingdom's security forces in years. Eleven of
the dead belonged to a counterterrorism unit whose tasks include
protecting the hajj.
That attack was claimed by a second alleged IS affiliate in Saudi Arabia
calling itself "Hijaz Province" of the Islamic State group, in
reference to the traditional name of the western stretch of the Arabian
Peninsula.
Al-Turki acknowledged that this year the kingdom saw the most terrorist
acts since 2003, when al-Qaida unleashed a wave of bombings that lasted
for three years until its militants were driven out to Yemen where they
remain active.
Little is publicly known about the structure of the Islamic State group
in Saudi Arabia, such as whether militants in the kingdom have direct
operational ties with the group's leadership based in its self-declared
"caliphate" in Iraq and Syria — or if they simply operate independently in the group's name.
Al-Turki said IS supporters in Saudi Arabia are little more than small
"cluster cells" or even individuals inspired by the IS group who find
one another by communicating online. He said their claims of having a
province or state in Saudi Arabia is nothing more than online
propaganda.
"In reality, they cannot control a centimeter anywhere in Saudi Arabia," he said.
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