Saudi Arabia was left reeling this week after Islamist
 militants stormed a smart residential compound and an oil company
 headquarters in Khobar, taking more than 50 people hostage. 22
 people, including nine of the hostages, were killed before Saudi
 troops stormed the compound where they were being held.  This incident raises new concerns about the Saudi
 government’s ability to combat Islamic terrorism, and the
 security of foreign workers in the country. The militants, who
 are thought to have Al-Qaeda links, were said to be specifically
 targeting foreigners. They were reported to have asked people in
 the compound, “Are you Muslim or Christian? We don’t
 want to kill Muslims.” The Oasis residential compound, one
 of the most luxurious in the city, is home to many oil company
 executives. Fears over the safety of its citizens have led the US
 to request that all its nationals leave the country immediately
 and the UK to issue travel advisory warnings.  The recent attacks have had an adverse effect on the price of
 oil with investors fearing that it is part of a sustained attempt
 to disrupt oil supplies from the world’s largest exporter.
 The recent events in Khobar follow gun attacks at a petrochemical
 plant in Yanbu which killed five foreigners, and a suicide bomb
 attack on a residential compound in November last year in Riyadh
 which left 17 dead.ARCHIVE: 5th week TT 2004 

