Saudi preacher shot dead in Guinea village

Abdulaziz bin Abdulmohsen al-Twaijri was shot dead after organising a prayer service 'that was not to the taste of the local population', local sources said.
2 min read
17 January, 2018
KSA has faced accusations of exporting Wahhabism which has gained popularity across West Africa [Getty]
A Saudi Arabian preacher was shot dead in Guinea's east after organising a prayer service that angered some villagers in the majority-Muslim West African country, local sources said on Wednesday. 

The preacher, identified by Saudi media as Abdulaziz bin Abdulmohsen al-Twaijri, was a member of a mission building mosques in Upper Guinea. He was killed on Tuesday night in the village of Kantebalandougou, between the towns of Kankan and Kerouane.

He was "shot twice in the chest while riding a motorcycle with a villager on the way to get his car", a security source told AFP.

According to a preliminary investigation, al-Twaijri, along with two of his compatriots, had organised "a prayer that was not to the taste of the local population, particularly traditional hunters who then ambushed him", the security source said.

"The Saudi died at the scene while his companion, who owned the motorcycle, was seriously injured and taken to a hospital in Kankan," said a medical source.

Saudi Arabia has long faced accusations of exporting Wahhabism, its ultra-conservative form of Islam, which has been gaining popularity across West Africa.

The austere doctrine has been increasingly adopted since the 1990s in Guinea, which is 85 percent Muslim, as its young people attend Arab schools.