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04:12 PM CDT on Sunday, May 2, 2004
YANBU, Saudi Arabia -- After spraying the office of Houston-based oil
contractor ABB-Lummus with gunfire, the four bearded men tied the body
of one victim to the bumper of a car and headed for the Ibn Hayyan
Secondary Boys School.
American and European families packed their bags Sunday after a deadly
attack on foreigners, and traumatized Saudi schoolchildren recounted how
the attackers proudly summoned them to watch them drag a victim's body
through the streets.
The streets of Yanbu were eerily quiet a day after four brothers went on
a bloody rampage that killed five Westerners and a Saudi. But behind
closed doors, foreigners scrambled to book flights and Saudis comforted
children shocked by the violence.
"I couldn't eat and I couldn't sleep the whole night. I have been having
nightmares," said an 18-year-old student who gave only his first name,
Rayyan. "This thing has changed my life forever."
Students said Sunday that the attackers drove into their parking lot and
fired into the air to attract attention to the bloodied corpse attached
to their car by its right leg. "This is the president of America!" the
men screamed.
"God is great! God is great! Come join your brothers in Fallujah!" they
shouted, referring to an Iraqi city where U.S. troops are battling
insurgents.
Students and school officials said some of the boys ran crying from the
scene.
"I was shocked and terrified when I saw them. I just froze. I didn't
know what to do," Rayyan said. "This is not right. This is un-Islamic."
Saudi troops deployed heavy weaponry Sunday to guard foreigners' houses
and offices. Troops patrolled the empty streets in armored vehicles as
government officials vowed to hunt down the terrorists who have struck
four foreign targets in the past year.
The more than 100 employees of ABB-Lummus in Yanbu all decided to leave
with their families within days, company spokesman Bjorn Edlund told The
Associated Press. Most of the employees are Americans, but they also
include Britons, Australians, Filipinos and Indians.
"Not surprisingly, everyone wanted to go home," Edlund said. The U.S.
Embassy issued a message Sunday night saying its staff would leave
diplomatic compounds only for essential business "until further notice."
It canceled all social events involving guests at the embassy or at the
U.S. consulates in Jiddah and Dhahran.
Britain's ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Sherard Cowper-Coles, visited
Yanbu, 220 miles north of Jiddah, to insist that the attack would not
cause "a mass exodus" of foreigners.
But behind closed doors, dozens of Westerners prepared to leave. "It's
not safe here anymore. I don't think I can stay any longer," said a
Canadian engineer, walking inside a foreigners' compound with his young
daughter. Like many Westerners, he refused to give his name out of
concern for his safety.
Families of Americans walked quietly through the Radhwa housing
compound, across the street from the Holiday Inn, but wouldn't speak to
reporters. Many Westerners were visibly nervous.
"It's a little freaky out here," said Nick Dockett, a 36-year-old
engineer from London. He quit his job with ABB in Yanbu two weeks ago
and was preparing to move to Thailand when the attack occurred. "I guess
I made the move at the right time," he said.
Gina Abercrombie-Winstanley, the U.S. consul general, advised Americans
to leave the kingdom.
The wounded -- reports on the number ranged from 25 to 50 -- recovered
Sunday at the Royal Commission Hospital. An American lay in the
intensive care unit, apparently using a respirator. Doctors wouldn't let
journalists approach and didn't give details of his identity or his
wounds.
In another room lay Abdullah al-Taimani, 13, who took shrapnel to his
back from a grenade. He groaned in pain as his father, Nasser, cursed
the attackers.
"These people are not Muslims," Nasser al-Taimani said. "What they have
done will only land them in hell."
The four attackers are brothers and are Saudis, a security official told
the AP on condition of anonymity. He did not further identify them.
Three of the men worked for ABB-Lummus, the energy arm of multinational
engineering company ABB. They reportedly used their keys to enter the
ABB building Saturday morning, then opened fire randomly.
They killed two Americans, two Britons, an Australian and a Saudi. The
Americans, the Australian and one of the Britons were ABB-Lummus
engineers, Edlund said. The other Briton was a contractor.
Police killed the four gunmen in a shootout after a car chase. One of
the attackers was reported to be on the Saudi kingdom's list of
most-wanted terrorists, and an Interior Ministry official told AP that
DNA tests were being conducted to confirm that.
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