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Saudi: Riyadh bomb suspect held


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RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (Reuters) -- Saudi Arabia says it has arrested a suspect in the November suicide bombing that killed 18 people in a housing compound in Riyadh.

It also added on Wednesday that it had seized a large cache of weapons including a surface-to-air missile.

An Interior Ministry statement read out on state television said the man, who was not identified for security reasons, was arrested last week after security forces raided his hideout where around 38 tonnes of explosives were stashed.

The announcement came a day after the United States and Britain warned of further possible attacks on Western housing compounds in the kingdom, the world's largest oil exporter and a regional U.S. ally. Riyadh is battling Muslim militants believed to be linked to Saudi-born Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network.

"Security forces located the hideout of one element of the terrorist cell that carried out the bombing at the Muhaya compound in Riyadh," the statement said, adding that the suspect had been arrested on the second day of the Muslim Eid al-Fitr holiday which began on November 25.

"The search continues for other elements of this cell and others like it," the statement added.

It said security forces also found at the hideout one surface-to-air missile, four rocket propelled grenades with a launcher, 20 hand grenades, automatic rifles and pamphlets inciting violence.

Last week Saudi authorities said they foiled a bigger attack than the November bombing when they seized a car with more than 1.2 tonnes of explosive -- four times the amount used in last month's bombing.

Saudi Arabia has cracked down on militants since triple suicide bombings killed 35 people in Riyadh in May, including nine Americans. Officials blamed both bombings on al Qaeda.



Copyright 2003 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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