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 Abdulaziz Al-Muqrin, a leader
of Al-Qaeda in Saudi Arabia (Xinhua/AFP
Photo)
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 These TV footages show Abdulaziz
Al-Muqrin (right top), leader of al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia, together with three
other gunmen were shot dead in Riyadh by the Saudi security forces, June
19. (Xinhua/AFP Photo)
 A Saudi man is checking a
damaged car at the site after Saudi security forces trade fires
with Al-Qaeda terrorists in Riyadh, June 19. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
RIYADH, June 20 (Xinhuanet) -- Al-Qaeda in Saudi
Arabia has confirmed the death of its leader in Abdul Aziz al-Muqrin, an
Islamist Internet site said on Sunday.
"Fighting commander Abdul Aziz bin Issa al-Muqrin
fell as a martyr on Friday ... in an ambush laid for him by the soldiers of
tyranny in the Malaz district of Riyadh," said the statement signed by "Al-Qaeda
in the Arab Peninsula."
"The Mujahideen are continuing the jihad (holy
struggle)that they have pledged to God and the killing of their brothers will
not weaken their resolve but only increase their determination and commitment,"
it said.
The website,
http://www.koolpages.com/sout19/index.htm, regularly publishes statements from
the Al-Qaeda terror network.
The Saudi authorities announced on Saturday the
killing of Abdulaziz Al-Muqrin, a leader of the terrorist group in Saudi Arabia,
along with three of his aides.
Al-Muqrin together with three other gunmen were shot
dead in Riyadh on Friday night as they were trying to dispose the body of US
hostage Paul Johnson, who was beheaded by the terrorists.
A security man was also killed and two others were
injured during the clash.
Saudi Arabian authorities said on Saturday that it
had substantially weakened al Qaeda by killing its leader in Saudi Arabia after
the group beheaded a US. hostage.
Saudi foreign policy adviser Adel al-Jubeir said in
Washington that Johnson's body had not been recovered. Saudi security forces
were still searching for the corpse, believed to be in the Riyadh area.
Twelve other militants were arrested in Friday's
operation,including one senior militant believed to have been involved in the
bombing in 2000 of the US. warship Cole off the coast of neighboring Yemen.
"We believe that with this blow to al Qaeda in Saudi
Arabia yesterday, we have substantially weakened their organization. We will
continue to pursue them with vigor until we eliminate them from our midst,"
Jubeir told a news conference.
"We are resolved to fight terrorism, those who fund
it and those who justify it. We will show no mercy," he added.
A Saudi Interior Ministry statement read out on
television named the other three dead militants as Faisal al-Dakheel, Turki
al-Muteiri and Ibrahim al-Dreihim. Dakheel was wanted for killingsincluding that
of an American in Riyadh, it said.
The statement said the four men were tracked down to
a petrol station in the Malazz district of central Riyadh.
Security forces found three cars, including one used
in an attack earlier this month on a British Broadcasting Corporation television
crew in Riyadh, it added.
They also found guns, three rocket propelled
grenades, 16 pipe bombs, 10 hand grenades and currency worth around 37,000 US
dollars.
Johnson was the third American killed in Riyadh in
the past 10 days. He worked for defense contractor Lockheed Martin making Apache
helicopter gunships, used by the US and Israel. Enditem
Saudi Arabia: Al-Qaida leader dead
KUWAIT CITY, June 19 (Xinhuanet) -- The Saudi Interior Ministry
announced on Saturday the killing of Abdulaziz Al-Muqrin, a leader of the
terrorist group in Saudi Arabia, along with three of his aides, reported Saudi
News Agency.
A statement issued by the ministry was quoted as saying that the
efforts exerted by the Saudi security forces to combat terrorism resulted in
locating a group of terrorists at a gasoline station in Riyadh, during with
intensive confrontations occurred.
Al-Muqrin together with three other gunmen were shot dead in
Riyadh on Friday night as they were trying to dispose the body of US hostage
Paul Johnson, who was beheaded by the terrorists.
The statement identified the other three killed gunmen as Turki
bin Fuhaid al-Mutairi, Ibrahim bin Abdullah al-Draihem and Faisal bin Abdul
Rahman al-Dakheel, who also involved in the killing of the US hostage on
Friday.
A security man was also killed and two others were injured
during the clash, added the statement.
Three cars were seized while some bombs, arms and ammunition as
well as money were confiscated. Twelve people on the wanted list were also
arrested.
The confirmation came shortly after a statement carried on an Islamist Website denied the death of Al-Muqrin, 32, the
most wanted al-Qaida leader in Saudi Arabia.
Earlier in the day, his group said in a statement carried on an
Islamist Website that reports about Al-Muqrin's death were false and aimed at
frustrating the spirits of his followers. Enditem |