Apr 18 2012
A suicide bomber has killed three Yemeni soldiers in southern Yemen, a
military official says, a day after a suspected US drone strike killed five
al-Qaeda affiliated militants.
The official said the bomber drove a car packed with explosives into a
military checkpoint on a hill between the southern provinces of Bayda and
Abyan, mostly lawless regions where al-Qaeda militants have strengthened their
presence.
At least five other soldiers were wounded in the attack, which the
official said was likely carried out by al-Qaeda or its local affiliates.
In a separate incident late on Monday, a suspected US drone strike in
Shabwa province killed five al-Qaeda militants, a local government official
said.
The strike was in the Kharama area between the towns of Azzan and Huta.
The deadly raid comes just days after three local al-Qaeda leaders were
killed in an air strike on their car in Bayda, about 210 kilometres southeast
of Sanaa.
The defence ministry said on Saturday's raid was conducted by Yemeni
warplanes, but a security official told AFP a US drone was responsible.
The United States has never formally acknowledged the use of drones
against al-Qaeda in Yemen, considered by Washington to be the most active and
deadly branch of the global terror network and a major focus of its "war
on terror."
In other violence on Tuesday, 10 soldiers were wounded in repeated
mortar attacks by al-Qaeda militants on a military base south of Loder, in Abyan,
where fierce clashes last week left more than 200 people dead.
Al-Qaeda has exploited a decline in central government control that
accompanied Arab Spring-inspired protests that eventually forced president Ali
Abdullah Saleh to resign.
Since last May, the extremist group's Yemeni branch, known as the
Partisans of Sharia (Islamic law), has seized several towns in the lawless
south and east, including Zinjibar, capital of Abyan province.
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