Tuesday, 3 Jul 2012
ADEN (Reuters) - At least four suspected al
Qaeda militants were killed in two air strikes, thought to have been carried
out by U.S. drones on vehicles travelling in central Yemen on Tuesday, a Yemeni
security source and witnesses said.
The attacks came as Yemeni authorities said
they had also arrested 14 al Qaeda militants, including nine foreigners - in
the latest sign of a U.S.-backed push to defeat Islamist fighters in Yemen.
The Yemeni security official said the air strikes
hit two vehicles travelling in the Bayhan area of Shabwa province - a mostly
desert south-eastern region where militants driven from their southern
strongholds last month had taken refuge.
Witnesses told Reuters four bodies were pulled
out from the wreckage of the first vehicle. The flames were so intense in the
second vehicle that no one could approach to check for any casualties.
The Defence Ministry named two of the dead as
senior al Qaeda figures, Fahd Saleh al-Anjaf al-Harithi and Hassan Ali al-Ishaqi.
Washington, concerned that al Qaeda was gaining
a new foothold in the Middle East, has stepped up drone attacks in Yemen.
A U.N. investigator last month called on the
U.S. administration to justify its policy of assassinating rather than
capturing militants.
THREE CELLS
Yemen's Defence Ministry said the 14 arrested
militants had been operating in three separate cells and plotting to attack
army and civilian leaders as well as foreign interests.
It did not say where or when they were
detained. The group included four Egyptians, two Jordanians, a Somali, a
Tunisian and a man from Dagestan in Russia's North Caucasus, it added.
Yemeni troops drove Islamist fighters last
month out of several towns they controlled in the south as the government
pressed ahead with a U.S.-backed offensive to defeat Ansar al-Sharia, a
tenacious offshoot of al Qaeda.
The group - meaning Partisans of Islamic Law -
has exploited instability in the Arabian Peninsula to gain a foothold in a
country that borders Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil exporter, alarming
the United States.
Separately, a security official said an al
Qaeda-linked militant arrested on Saturday night had died from his wounds.
He was among eight militants captured while
trying to flee their former strongholds in the southern province of Abyan to
the neighboring governorate of Dalea.
Hundreds of militants have been on the run since
they were pushed out of Abyan. Ansar al-Sharia swears allegiance to al Qaeda in
the Arabian Peninsula, which U.S. officials have called the most dangerous
offshoot of the global militant network.
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