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TERROR WARS
Top Iran official, Saudi FM discuss 'terrorism'
by Staff Writers
Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (AFP) Aug 26, 2014


Saudi police arrest eight suspected jihadist recruiters
Riyadh (AFP) Aug 26, 2014 - Saudi police have arrested eight people in the northwest suspected of recruiting young people to join the Islamic State jihadist group in Iraq and Syria, the interior ministry said Tuesday.

Police in Tamir, 150 kilometres (100 miles) north of Riyadh, arrested eight people "who deluded young people into joining foreign extremist groups," the ministry said in a statement carried by the official SPA news agency.

The arrests were made as part of security operation implementing a royal decree ordering a crackdown on members and supporters of extremist groups, the statement said.

An imam and a teacher were among the people arrested, "supporters of the Islamic State, accused of encouraging young people to go to the war zones in Syria and Iraq," the Saudi-owned pan-Arab daily Al-Hayat reported.

The largely Sunni kingdom of Saudi Arabia favours an austere form of Islam but has been exasperated by the rise of Islamist radicals across the Middle East.

On March 7, it declared extremist groups to be "terrorist organisations" and instructed Saudis fighting in other countries to return home.

Groups classified as terrorist by Riyadh include the Islamic State and Al-Qaeda and its affiliates.

They also include the Muslim Brotherhood after Saudi authorities strongly supported the Egyptian army's overthrow of president Mohamed Morsi and its subsequent bloody crackdown on his Islamist movement.

In February, the government said any Saudi taking part in foreign fighting and belonging to "terrorist groups" would face a prison sentence of three to 20 years.

Last week, Saudi Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz al-Sheikh blasted Al-Qaeda and Islamic State jihadists as "enemy number one" of Islam.

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal discussed Tuesday regional developments and the fight against Islamic State jihadists with a senior Iranian official visiting his country's longtime regional rival, an Iranian diplomat said.

The visit by Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian to the city of Jeddah was the first by a high-level official from Shiite Iran to Sunni Saudi Arabia since Hassan Rouhani became the Islamic republic's president in August last year.

The meeting was "fruitful", Iran's representative at the Jeddah-based Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Riza Hamid Dahqani told AFP.

The diplomat, who attended the meeting, said that the two men discussed relations between both "neighbours", regional developments and "the challenges facing the region such as extremism and Israel's savage aggression" on Gaza Strip.

They particularly discussed the situation "in Iraq and means to confront extremism and terrorism," said Dahqani, referring to IS jihadists, operating in Syria and Iraq.

The Iranian diplomat did not elaborate on how Saudi and Iran could cooperate to stop the advance of the jihadists.

The meeting comes as US media reported that Washington, which has launched air raids in northern Iraq against IS, could consider similar action against the group's fighters in Syria.

Iran and Saudi are on opposite sides in the Syrian conflict, with Tehran backing President Bashar al-Assad and Riyadh supporting the rebels trying to topple him.

Amir-Abdollahian visited Riyadh in June, but that was for an OIC meeting.

Iran's financial daily Donya-e Eghtessad wrote: "It (the visit) is a step towards improving relations between Tehran and Riyadh."

The authorities in Saudi Arabia had invited Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, but he declined, citing the ongoing nuclear negotiations between Iran and the P5+1 powers.

Donya-e Eghtessad also quoted Amir-Abdollahian as saying a Zarif trip to Riyadh should "be prepared and protocol must be respected".

Rouhani has stated his wish to improve relations with Iran's neighbours, especially Saudi Arabia, the Gulf's other regional heavyweight.

In June, Rouhani warned that Muslim states which funnel petrodollars to jihadist Sunni fighters wreaking havoc in Iraq will become their next target.

"I advise Muslim countries that support the terrorists with their petrodollars to stop," Rouhani said, referring to Saudi Arabia and Qatar which Tehran accuses of financing the jihadists.

"Tomorrow you will be targeted... by these savage terrorists. Wash your hands of killing and the killing of Muslims," he added.

Tehran also supports protests by Bahrain's Shiite majority while Riyadh backs its Sunni rulers.

Saudi Arabia is also concerned about Iran's nuclear programme and fears a rapprochement between Tehran and the United States in the context of an agreement on the nuclear issue.

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