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Saudi Arabia oil facilities ablaze after drone strikes | Saudi Arabia oil facilities ablaze after drone strikes |
(36 minutes later) | |
Drone attacks have set alight two major oil facilities run by the state-owned company Aramco in Saudi Arabia, state media say. | Drone attacks have set alight two major oil facilities run by the state-owned company Aramco in Saudi Arabia, state media say. |
Footage showed flames and huge palls of smoke over Abqaiq, site of the world's largest oil processing plant. | |
A second drone attack also started fires in the Khurais oil field to the west. The fires are now under control at both facilities, state media said. | A second drone attack also started fires in the Khurais oil field to the west. The fires are now under control at both facilities, state media said. |
Iran-aligned Houthi fighters in Yemen have been blamed for previous attacks. | Iran-aligned Houthi fighters in Yemen have been blamed for previous attacks. |
However, the Saudi media reports did not say who could be behind the latest attacks. | However, the Saudi media reports did not say who could be behind the latest attacks. |
"At 04:00 (0100 GMT), the industrial security teams of Aramco started dealing with fires at two of its facilities in Abqaiq and Khurais as a result of... drones," the official Saudi Press Agency reported. | |
"The two fires have been controlled." | "The two fires have been controlled." |
Abqaiq is about 60km (37 miles) south-west of Dhahran in Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province, while Khurais, some 200km further south-west, has the country's second largest oilfield. | |
Who could be behind the attacks? | |
Houthi fighters were blamed for drone attacks on the Shaybah natural gas liquefaction facility last month and on other oil facilities in May. | |
The Iran-aligned rebel movement is fighting the Yemeni government and a Saudi-led coalition. | |
Yemen has been at war since 2015, when President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi was forced to flee the capital Sanaa by the Houthis. Saudi Arabia backs President Hadi, and has led a coalition of regional countries against the rebels. | |
The coalition launches air strikes almost every day, while the Houthis often fire missiles into Saudi Arabia. | |
However, there are other sources of tension in the region, often stemming from the rivalry between Saudi Arabia and Iran. | |
Saudi Arabia and the US both blamed Iran for attacks in the Gulf on two oil tankers in June and July, allegations Tehran denied. | |
In May, four tankers, two of them Saudi-flagged, were damaged by explosions within the UAE's territorial waters in the Gulf of Oman. | |
Saudi Arabia and then US National Security Adviser John Bolton blamed Iran. Tehran said the accusations were "ridiculous". |