Around 30 people were also injured in the attack, authorities announced on Tuesday.
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Six people, including four Pakistanis, were killed and around 30 injured in a shooting near a Shiite mosque in Muscat, authorities announced on Tuesday, July 16. A rare occurrence in the Sultanate of Oman, known for its stability and neutrality. The police specified in a statement on X that “the three attackers were killed”, without mentioning their nationality. An investigation has been opened.
The shooting began at 11pm local time (7pm GMT) on Monday and continued into the early hours of Tuesday, Pakistan’s ambassador to Muscat, Imran Ali, told AFP. A security perimeter was set up near the mosque named after Ali Ibn Abi Taleb, the first Shiite imam, in eastern Muscat.
Footage verified by AFP shows people fleeing in front of a mosque, whose minaret is visible, as gunshots ring out. One person can be heard screaming “Oh God” and repeat “Oh Hussein”, in reference to the imam whom Shiites consider the legitimate successor to the Prophet Muhammad. Imran Ali said the attackers had taken the faithful in “hostages”, later released during an operation by Omani security forces.
He said he did not know the attackers’ motives. “Everyone is keeping a low profile about it,” The diplomat continued, stressing that the Shiite mosque was frequented by migrants from Southeast Asia, including Pakistanis, who number 400,000 in Oman.