The three gunmen who shot and killed six people at a Shiite Muslim mosque in Oman in an attack claimed by Islamic State this week were all Omani nationals, police said on Thursday.
The assault began on Monday evening at the Ali bin Abi Talib Mosque in the Wadi Kabir neighborhood of Oman’s capital, Muscat, as Shiite Muslims gathered.
The Royal Oman Police said the three gunmen were brothers and “were killed due to their insistence on resisting security personnel.” It said that police investigations had indicated the three gunmen were “influenced by misguided ideas.”
The six people killed by the gunmen were four Pakistani nationals, an Indian, and a police officer responding to the attack, which Islamic State later claimed responsibility for.
Pakistan has labeled the assault a terror attack.
Islamic State on Tuesday said that three of its “suicide attackers” fired on worshippers at the mosque on Monday evening and exchanged gunfire with Omani security forces until morning.
A video of what the Islamic State said were the three attackers behind the shooting was released on Thursday on the group’s Telegram channel.
The video showed the faces of the three gunmen and was allegedly recorded before the attack. One of them said that “Islamic State soldiers will be at an infidels’ temple in Muscat.”
The Sunni militant group also published what it said was a video of the attack on its Telegram site. It has claimed responsibility this year for high-profile attacks in Russia and Iran that inflicted mass casualties, and it is active in Afghanistan. It had not claimed an assault on the Arabian Peninsula for several years until the attack in Oman.
Its operations have indicated the group is attempting a comeback after it was crushed by a U.S.-led coalition following its occupation of large swaths of territory in Iraq and Syria and declared a caliphate.
It also inspired lone-wolf attacks in the West.
Any Islamic State inroads in Gulf Arab oil producers such as Oman would raise fears in Washington and the region, which has long viewed militant Islamic groups as a major threat.
Dozens of people at the mosque in Oman were wounded with around 30 people treated at local hospitals, including for gunshot wounds.
Monday evening marked the beginning of Ashura, an annual period of mourning, which many Shiite Muslims mark publicly, to commemorate the 7th century death of Hussein, a grandson of the Prophet Mohammad. The observation of Ashura has sometimes triggered sectarian tensions between Sunni and Shiite Muslims in some Middle East countries.
The attack was largely unprecedented in Oman, where most of its citizens follow the Ibadi Muslim faith that shares many similarities with mainstream Sunni Islam. Oman has a small but influential Omani Shiite population. Like other Gulf countries, there is a large and significant foreign workforce in Oman, too.