May 10, 2012
ADEN (Reuters) - Missile strikes killed eight militants early on
Thursday outside a town in southern Yemen which is a stronghold of al
Qaeda-linked insurgents fighting government forces for more than a year,
residents said.
The strikes near the town of Jaar appeared to have been launched from
the sea and some senior militants were believed to be among the dead, the
residents told Reuters.
Government officials could not be immediately reached.
The attack was the latest strike against militants in the coastal Abyan
province on the Gulf of Aden who have exploited mass protests against former
president Ali Abdullah Saleh's 33-year rule to seize large swathes of territory
in the south.
Yemen's army, which split into two factions during the uprising that
eventually unseated Saleh, has been battling to get the upper hand against the
militants.
Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), the Yemen-based branch of the
militant network, has plotted abortive overseas attacks and is a major concern
for Washington, which is waging an assassination campaign against suspected
members using drone and missile strikes.
U.S. officials revealed publicly on Monday that they thwarted an AQAP
plot to arm a suicide bomber with a non-metallic device, an upgraded version of
the "underwear bomb" carried onto a plane on Christmas Day 2009.
Yemen's fractured state and dysfunctional security apparatus provide al
Qaeda's franchise in the poor Arab country with a suitable breeding ground for
such bomb plots.
Meanwhile, tribal leaders in parts of Yemen where drone attacks aimed at
AQAP have killed civilians say the strikes are turning more and more people
against the government and the United States.
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