AFP
March 8, 2012
ADEN — The Yemeni army has killed
seven suspected Al Qaeda militants in an artillery strike on Zinjibar, an
extremist stronghold in the restive southern Abyan province, a military official
said on Thursday.
The assault follows one of the
deadliest Al Qaeda attacks on Yemeni security forces in the southern outskirts
of Zinjibar on Sunday that killed 185 troops.
“The army fired artillery shells at Al Qaeda
positions in Zinjibar” late Wednesday night, the official said on condition of
anonymity.
A local official in the nearby
town of Jaar meanwhile said that “the bodies of seven Al-Qaeda fighters” were
transferred to the militant stronghold for burial.
Al-Qaeda, which claimed responsibility
for Sunday’s attack, said in a statement it took “73 soldiers” captive and
seized a tank, anti-aircraft weapons, a rocket launcher, rockets and 11
Kalashnikov assault rifles, as well as three military vehicles and “a large
amount of ammunition.”
Yemen’s newly formed cabinet at an
emergency meeting late Wednesday condemned Al-Qaeda’s escalating attacks in the
country’s mostly lawless south and urged the divided and battered security
forces to “unite in the face of terrorism and extremism...that threatens
Yemen’s security and stability.”
The ministers in a statement
released on the official SABA news agency cautioned they would not hesitate “to
punish ... those (members of the security forces) who neglect their duties.”
The government warning was triggered
by allegations that Sunday’s assault on the army base in Kud was an “inside
job” and that some soldiers had collaborated with the extremists.
The ministry of interior meanwhile
said late Wednesday that an Al Qaeda plot to seize the city of Mukalla, the
capital of Hadramawt, had been uncovered and that security forces in the area
have been placed on high alert.
Attacks on security forces have
escalated since President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi pledged, during his presidential
inauguration speech on February 25, to eradicate Al Qaeda.
Al Qaeda and their local
affiliates have launched near daily attacks on security forces and police in
Abyan, as well as the provinces of Bayda, Shabwa and Hadramawt in the south and
east of the country.
No comments:
Post a Comment