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Arab News
The arrest of one of the two men suspected of masterminding the
triple suicide bombings in Riyadh in May is a significant victory in
the fight against terrorism and a major blow to the Al-Qaeda
network. Altogether, some 50 people suspected of involvement in
terrorism, including four women, are now in custody following a
series of raids by the security forces. Clearly the net is closing
in around the terrorists. Ali Abdul Rahman Saeed Al-Faqaasi —
suspected of being a leading figure in the terrorist network —
decided to give himself up.
It would be gratifying to believe that Faqaasi’s surrender was
directly linked to last week’s appeal by Interior Minister Prince
Naif to the public to help root out terrorism — that he discovered
he had nowhere to hide, that everywhere he went there were eyes
watching, ready to turn him. The battle against terrorism has to
involve everyone. We cannot be passive about this, thinking that it
is the security forces’ problem. It is our problem because it is
ordinary people — people who read this newspaper, who shop in the
supermarket, whom we see in the streets, in the mosques, in the
cafes, at the beach — who are the victims of these murderous
barbarians.
What his arrest and those of others last week certainly spell out
is that intelligence work is paying dividends. When last Tuesday,
the police stopped three men in a car on the Makkah-Jeddah
Expressway carrying maps of government installations, it is
impossible to believe that it was pure chance. The police knew who
they were looking for.
The fact that on the same day two other suspects were arrested in
Abha shows, however, how widespread this cancer is. But that is no
reason to believe that it will not be eradicated. Hardly a day
passes without another raid, another arrest, another success notched
up against Al-Qaeda. Eighteen people thought to be linked to Al-Qaeda
have just been extradited to Sudan and eight other militants are
about to be extradited to Yemen.
Last week’s assault by Yemeni forces on hideouts used by
militants in the south of the country should also be seen in that
same wider picture, all the more so because, if the authorities are
correct in saying that the explosives for the Riyadh bombings were
smuggled from Yemen, then terrorism in the two countries is
particularly linked.
The fight against extremism is not just a Western fight, it is a
Saudi fight, a Yemeni fight, a Pakistani fight, an Indonesian fight
— everyone’s fight.
This past week has shown that Saudi Arabia is just one corner of
a global battleground. It is a fight that will be fought to the
finish — but it will be won.
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