Saudi Arabia, UAE ‘lead way in fighting terror ideology’
It has been 40 years since Saudi Arabia first experienced a terror
attack, which shocked all Muslims worldwide. It took place at their most
sacred place where the Kaaba has been located for centuries. The rise
of extremism in the Kingdom began on Muharram 1, 1400 — corresponding
to Nov. 20, 1979 — when a deviant group stormed the Holy Mosque of
Makkah. The incident, which lasted two weeks, claimed the lives of more
than 100 people.
It was the 1st of Muharram, the first month of the Islamic calendar.
Hundreds of worshippers were circling the Holy Kaaba, in spirituality
and peace, performing the dawn prayer. It was nearly 5:25 a.m. All of a
sudden, the attendants started to hear sounds of bullets that turned the
most peaceful place into a stage for killers, who targeted ordinary,
innocent people and rescuers.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has said that extremism started after 1979. He has pledged a return to a moderate past.
“We are returning to what we were before — a country of moderate Islam
that is open to all religions and to the world,” he told the Future
Investment Initiative conference in Riyadh last year.
“We will not spend the next 30 years of our lives dealing with destructive ideas. We will destroy them today,” he added.
The Saudi authorities had to either immediately crush the aggressors or
call on them to lay down their arms. The government sent the attackers a
warning through a megaphone stressing that what the deviant group
inside the Holy Mosque was doing was in complete contradiction to the
teachings of Islam. The warning, in the name of government of the late
King Khaled, also included the following Qur’anic verse to remind the
attackers of their heinous acts: “Whoever intends a deviant deed at the
Holy Mosque, in religion, or wrongdoing, We will make him taste a
painful punishment,” and “Do they not then see that We have made a
sanctuary secure, and that men are being snatched away from all around
them? Then, do they believe in that which is vain, and reject the Grace
of Allah?”
117 members of the deviant group led by Juhayman Al-Otaibi were killed
in the encounter, 69 others were executed less than a month later, and
19 received jail sentences.
However, all calls on the attackers to surrender were fruitless. From
the high minarets of the sacred mosque, snipers started gunning down
innocent people outside the Grand Mosque.
King Khaled gathered the country’s senior ulema (scholars) to discuss
the matter with them. They all agreed that the aggressors were, from an
Islamic point of view, considered apostates, as a Muslim never kills
innocent people. Doing that inside the holy mosque was even more
atrocious. The ulema issued a fatwa (religious edict) to kill them in
accordance with the instructions of the Islamic Shariah. The king
ordered an assault. However, he said the lives of the innocent people
seized by the attackers should be preserved. He also demanded that the
Holy Kaaba and the soldiers be unharmed. And he directed the forces to
arrest the offenders alive if possible.
Filled with enthusiasm to liberate their sacred mosque, the Saudi
soldiers received the orders to free it from the criminals’ control. The
attack to free the mosque began with the Saudi soldiers showing skills
in hunting the offenders according to a well-studied plan until they
succeeded in taking control of the whole mosque.
When captured, the members of the group were treated mercifully and
gently. In this regard, the former head of the Special Security Forces,
Maj. Gen. Mohammed Al-Nufaie, told a satellite TV channel that when the
mastermind of the attack, Juhayman Al-Otaibi, was caught, a security
member grabbed him by his beard. “When a royal saw that, he angrily
ordered the soldier to remove his hand from the man’s beard,” Al-Nufaie
remembered.
Al-Nufaie said Prince Saud Al-Faisal approached Juhayman and asked him
why he had committed these acts. “Juhayman replied: ‘It was Satan.’ The
prince also humanely asked him if he was complaining about anything or
if he wanted anything. Juhayman pointed to a little wound on his leg and
asked for water,” the retired major-general, who was present, said.
Al-Nufaie added that they were all very happy with the liberation of the
Grand Mosque: “It was a true rejoicing after a two-week period of
professional work. We were thrilled to bring the atmosphere of the
mosque back to its normal serenity and tranquility.”
A witness, Hizam Al-Mastouri, 75, told Arab News that he was a soldier who participated in the operation against the attackers.
“We entered the Grand Mosque in a military vehicle to transport our
colleagues inside the Masa’a area, near the Mount Al-Marwa. The shooting
was extensive, coming from everywhere toward us,” he said.
He added that the companions of Juhayman were hiding in the many corners
of the Masa’a. “They could see us, while we were not able to see them.
With time, the security leadership made changes in their plans in a way
that suited the situation,” Al-Mastouri said.
The former Editor in Chief of Arab News, Khaled Almaeena, pointed out
that it was a cool morning and he had gone to Makkah to visit a cousin
when he was told there was a disturbance around the Grand Mosque. “I did
not pay any attention at that time because what I came to know later
was unimaginable,” he said.
Crowds of people had gathered and there was a lot of commotion. “Rumors
were flying of the Holy Kaaba being seized by ‘foreigners’. Some were
telling different stories. I came back to Jeddah and watched the Saudi
Television channel, the only one we could see in those days,” he said.
“I was working in Saudia (Saudi Arabian Airlines) but in the evening
would go to work part-time at the English station of Radio Jeddah. Even
there, reports were sketchy. We had to use the transistor radio to get
news from outside stations like the BBC, VOA and Monte Carlo.”
He added that he decided to see for himself and “on the fourth, fifth
and sixth morning I would go in my car and off to Makkah. I parked my
car at a distance and observed the Holy Mosque,” he said.
“It was a sad sight to see the holiest place in Islam empty. There were
no visitors streaming toward the gates. In fact, there was firing from
the minarets and I could see the puff of smoke from the different
minarets. There was a smell of gunpowder and smoke.”
Almaeena said that an occasional helicopter would hover high in the sky,
keeping far away from the perimeter of the Grand Mosque. “The attack
and seizure of the mosque took everyone by surprise. And it took time
for all of us, including the security forces, to take stock of what was
truly an alarming situation,” he said.
Days passed and no calls for prayers were heard, he continued. “However,
after days this band of zealots was overpowered and their leader
Juhayman Al-Otaibi was captured. Around the world, there was more
satisfaction in the Muslim world,” he said.
The veteran journalist said he had to report on the incident for the
radio, which he did by recording on an old tape recorder and then
broadcasting it from Jeddah.
“The capture of the zealots and their leaders was filmed and we had to
broadcast it ‘live.’ The available technology did not help. Three people
were entrusted with the task. The late Badr Kurayem, one of Saudi
Arabia’s leading radio and television broadcasters; Dr. Hashem Abdo
Hashem, who later became editor in chief of Okaz; and myself,” he said.
“So here was Dr. Abdo writing the script in his long, flowing
handwriting, Badr Kurayem reading the Arabic script and me doing an
impromptu live translation, struggling with some of the adjectives that
Dr. Abdo was using.” He noted that it was not an easy task but they were
able to do it. “Those were dark days but luckily the siege ended,” he
added.
Almaeena said that although there was no social media or instant
reporting and journalism was a slow process in those days, the coverage
by the Saudi press was professional.
Another prominent journalist, Mohammed Al-Nawsani, said that he was the
first media personality to circle the Kaaba after the offenders were
arrested.
“You can’t imagine how difficult those days were, as the Kaaba is Qibla
of all Muslims. Much though I was shocked to know that the Grand Mosque
was captured, I was even much more overjoyed and proud of our security
men and their professionalism in dealing with the incident,” he said.
Like father is not like son
Hathal bin Juhayman Al-Otaibi, the son of the extremist who seized the
Holy Mosque in 1979, has overshadowed his father’s radical legacy and
was recently promoted to the position of colonel in Saudi Arabia’s
National Guards. Hathal was only one year old when his father attacked
the Grand Mosque.
Many Saudis on social media described the news of the promotion as an
example of “fairness” by Saudi Arabia. They lauded the fact that the son
of someone who initiated extremism in the country has now become an
integral part of the security apparatus.
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