March 18, 2012
A Yemeni militant group affiliated with al-Qaida has claimed
responsibility for a shooting that killed an American teacher in the southern
city of Taiz.
Militants riding a motorcycle shot the man in his car on Sunday. Yemeni
officials say the American had been working in Taiz as the deputy director of a
Swedish-run language institute. Authorities launched an investigation to find
the perpetrators of the attack.
A U.S. State Department official
told VOA the Obama administration "has seen reports that a U.S. citizen
has been killed in Yemen ... and is working diligently to obtain additional
information."
Al-Qaida linked group Ansar
al-Sharia sent a text message to Yemen-based journalists saying it killed the
American because he was a Christian missionary. Islamist militants often accuse
Western aid and development groups of proselytizing.
A Swiss woman working as a
language teacher in Yemen's western port of Hodeida was abducted last week. The
identity of the kidnappers remains unclear.
Al-Qaida's Yemeni affiliate is
active in Yemen's center and south, where its fighters seized several towns in
Abyan province last year.
A local official told foreign news
agencies that missiles fired from the sea struck al-Qaida positions north of
Abyan's provincial capital, Zinjibar, beginning Saturday. The official said at
least 14 militants were killed. It was not clear if Yemeni or U.S. warships
fired the missiles.
Witnesses said Yemeni government
warplanes also attacked the al-Qaida-held town of Jaar on Sunday, prompting
residents to flee their homes. There were no immediate reports of civilian
casualties.
Yemen has been in chaos since last
year when anti-government protests forced longtime autocratic ruler Ali
Abdullah Saleh to agree to resign as president. His deputy Abed Rabbo Mansour
Hadi took over as president last month, vowing to fight al-Qaida and stabilize
the impoverished nation.
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