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THERE was widespread outrage yesterday after a deadly suicide bombing at Islam’s second-holiest site in the Saudi city of Medina, one of three attacks in the kingdom on a single day.

Religious and political leaders across the Middle East denounced the attack near the Prophet’s Mosque that left four dead and came as Muslims prepare for the feast this week marking the end of the holy month Ramadan.

There were no claims of responsibility for Monday’s bombings in Medina, Jeddah and the eastern city of Qatif, but the Islamic State group had urged its supporters to carry out attacks during Ramadan.

The jihadist group has claimed or been blamed for a wave of shootings and bombings during the holy month this year, including in Orlando, Bangladesh, Istanbul and Baghdad.

The suicide bombing in Medina came during sunset prayers at the mosque — where Islam’s Prophet Mohammed is buried and which attracts millions of pilgrims each year. The Saudi interior ministry said officers became suspicious of a man heading for the Prophet’s Mosque through a parking lot.

“As they tried to stop him, he blew himself up with an explosive belt causing his death and the death of four police,” the statement said, adding that five others were wounded.

The targeting of Medina caused widespread outrage, both in Saudi Arabia and across the Muslim world.

The head of Saudi Arabia’s Shura Council, the kingdom’s main government advisory body, called it an “unprecedented” incident. “This crime, which causes goosebumps, could not have been perpetrated by someone who had an atom of belief in his heart,” Abdullah al-Sheikh said.

Cairo-based Al-Azhar, the highest authority in Sunni Islam, condemned the attacks and stressed “the sanctity of the houses of God, especially the Prophet’s Mosque.”

Saudi Arabia’s supreme council of clerics said the blasts “prove that those renegades ... have violated everything that is sacred.”

The attack drew condemnation across Islam’s religious divide, with Shiite power Iran calling for Muslim unity after the attacks in its Sunni-dominated regional rival. “There are no more red lines left for terrorists to cross. Sunnis, Shiites will both remain victims unless we stand united as one,” Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said.

Lebanon-based Shiite militant group Hezbollah, which Saudi Arabia accuses of supporting “terrorist acts,” also denounced the Medina attack as “a new sign of the terrorists’ contempt for all that Muslims consider sacred.”

Middle East expert Madhawi al-Rasheed said the attack in Medina appeared aimed at humiliating the Saudi government, the guardian of Islam’s holiest sites.