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RIYADH (Reuters) – When Saudi Arabian security forces arrested Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr in July 2012, it sparked days of protests where three people died, a sign of the regard many of the kingdom’s minority sect held for the preacher, who was executed on Saturday.
But by executing him – and three other Shiites – alongside more than 40 convicted al Qaeda attackers, including some of the Sunni jihadist movement’s most vehement ideologues, the Saudi government may have increased chances of internal sectarian conflict.
religionnews.com/2016/01/02/saudi-arabia-shiite-sunni-jihad/The executions have provoked protests Saturday (Jan. 2) from Bahrain to London. A prominent cleric with close links to Iran’s ruling establishment denounced the execution and predicted the repercussions would bring down the Saudi ruling family.