By Fatik al-Rodaini
SANA'A, April 23, 2012- An officer
was killed on Monday in Yemen's southern province of Hadhrmout by armed group
believed to be al-Qaeda suspected militants.
According to a security source in
al-Mukalla, Adnan Okeish, an
officer in intelligence division was killed on Monday afternoon by unknown gunmen
in Raes Hoela district, east of al-Mukalla. "They opened fire on him while he was
driving," the source added.
Meanwhile, at least 7 al-Qaeda militants were killed in
two airstrikes in the south where militants are controlled swaths of town
there.
Sources said that U.S. drone hit a
vehicle in Yemen's southern province of Shabwa, killing three al-Qaeda militants,
while a Yemeni strike killed four militants
near Lawder city in southern Abyan
province.
On Sunday at least three al-Qaeda militants were killed in an air strike
conducted by Yemeni air forces in Yemen's eastern province of Mareb.
The air strike took-out a vehicle
believed to be carrying al-Qaeda militants on al-Sanda district near
Obeida valley, killing at least three passengers.
In Yemen's southern province of Abyan, where fierce clashes between Yemeni
troops and militants linked to al-Qaeda,
at least 17 militants were killed on Sunday in an air raid near Lawde,
about 150 km northeast of Zinjibar, Abyan's provincial capital.
Earlier this week Yemeni air force carried out two airstrikes in the
province of Abyan against al-Qaeda hideouts, killing scores of militants.
According to the Defense ministry, the attacks also left five people wounded.
Yemen's military regained part of a strategic southern city yesterday
after an intense battle with al-Qaeda militants left 19 people dead as the
government tries to purge the insurgents from their strongholds.
More than 250 people have been killed in the fighting and airstrikes in
southern Yemen over the past two weeks. US drones and Yemeni warplanes have
regularly targeted southern regions.
The war on al-Qaeda is one of the most challenging tests facing the
country's new president Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi. He took power after Saleh
stepped down in February as part of power-transfer deal brokered by Arab Gulf
countries and backed by the United States.
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