Drone attacks cause fire at two Saudi Aramco facilities

Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Interior said on Saturday
that drone attacks caused fires at two Saudi Aramco facilities, adding that the
blazes are under control.
One of the facilities is located in Abqaiq, near
Dammam in the Kingdom's Eastern Province. The other facility is located in the
Hijrat Khurais oilfield.
“At 4 am on Saturday morning, Aramco’s industrial
security teams fought two fires in two of the company’s facilities in Abqaiq
and Khurais after they were targeted by drones… the two fires were controlled
and contained, and the related authorities have begun investigating,” the
ministry said in a statement.
According to an Al Arabiya correspondent reporting
from Abqaiq, security officials have been at the scene containing the fires
since they broke out at dawn on Saturday.
No residential areas are located near the sites, the
correspondent said, adding that there were no casualities so far and that
traffic is flowing smoothly in the surrounding area of the Aramco facility in
Abqaiq.
Yemen’s Houthi militia claimed responsibility for
drone attacks on two Saudi Aramco oil installations in the Kingdom’s Eastern
Province on Saturday, the militia’s military spokesman said on Al Masirah TV.
The broadcaster said the Houthis had deployed 10
drones against the sites in Abqaiq and Khurais, and the militia pledged to
widen the range of its attacks on Saudi Arabia, which leads a coalition
fighting them in Yemen.
The Iran-backed Houthi militia has also launched
several other drones targeting the Kingdom.
On May 14, the Houthis also claimed an attack by
explosive-laden drones that targeted Saudi Aramco pipelines in al-Dawadmi.
Later, a report by The Wall Street Journal cited US
officials familiar with the intelligence as saying that the attack originated from
Iraq, not Yemen. They said that the attack was carried out by Iran-backed
militias in Iraq.
The Aramco pumping station in Saudi Arabia's
al-Dawadmi, which was targeted on May 14, is located around 500 kilometers from
the Iraqi border and 800 kilometers from the Yemen border.