Associated Press KUWAIT CITY: Kuwait's public prosecutor has issued a gag order to media on information related to a police raid that uncovered a large cache of arms, ammunition and explosives hidden deep underground at a farm.
The official Kuwait News Agency says three Kuwaitis, all members of a terrorist cell, were arrested during the raid on the farmhouse and three other houses. Police say they found 204 hand grenades, 65 guns, 56 rocket-propelled grenades and 317 pounds (144 kilograms) of bomb-making material.
Local newspapers quoting unnamed security officials linked the cell to Iran's Revolutionary Guard and Lebanon's Shiite Hezbollah group.
Public Prosecutor Dherar al-Asousi was quoted in the official Kuwait News Agency saying Sunday that he ordered the media blackout because speculative reports "harm" national unity and could "negatively impact" the investigation.
Weapons seized in Kuwait came from Iran: reports
Reuters KUWAIT: A huge arms cache seized in Kuwait last week was smuggled into the country from Iran, two Kuwaiti media reported Sunday. The Interior Ministry said Thursday authorities had found ammunition, explosives, weapons and grenades in holes dug under houses in an area near the Iraqi border. Three men who owned the houses were detained.
Al-Anba newspaper reported at the time that the weapons had been smuggled across the border from Iraq for use by members of a Hezbollah cell.
But the Al-Rai and Al-Qabas dailies, citing unidentified sources, reported Sunday that the weapons had been brought into Kuwait by sea from Iran. They quoted the sources as saying that the new information had come from confessions made by the detainees during interrogation.
Al-Qabas said the number of suspects held had risen to 13.
“The suspects have disclosed that there is a direct Iranian line in supplying weapons to Kuwait by sea,” Al-Rai said.
The Kuwaiti Interior Ministry declined to comment.
Another newspaper, Al-Jarida, said the Iranian Revolutionary Guard had trained members of the cell a year ago, along with citizens from Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, on the use of weapons and explosives, at an unidentified Red Sea island.
It said the trainees had traveled to the island through a port controlled by Yemeni Houthis, an Iranian-linked group which controls much of northern Yemen.
Kuwait has been on alert since a suicide bomber killed 27 people in an attack on a Shiite mosque in the capital, Kuwait City, on June 26.
The interior minister said in June it was at war with hard-line militants, who officials said were trying to stoke sectarian strife in a state where the two Muslim sects have traditionally coexisted peacefully.
Ties between Iran and its Gulf Arab neighbors are strained by suspicions that Tehran is trying to extend its influence into Arab countries including Syria, Iraq and Yemen.
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