6 Yemenis Killed in Clashes With Government
Forces After Killing 3 by US Drone Missiles
May 25, 2010
Yemen airstrike, clash kill 6, Americans
freed
By Ahmed Al-Haj
Associated Press,
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
SANA’A, Yemen —
Heraldnet.com -
A government airstrike on what was believed to be an al-Qaida
hide-out in a remote Yemen province accidentally killed a provincial
councilman and his two bodyguards, a security official said today.
The incident sparked clashes between tribesmen protesting the deaths
and police that claimed three more lives later today, a local Marib
provincial official said.
Meanwhile, Yemeni tribesmen released
two American tourists — a man and a woman — a day after they were
kidnapped while traveling northwest of San’a. The pair, along with their
driver, had been abducted by members of the Sharda tribe demanding the
release of a jailed tribesman.
The U.S. Embassy said Yemeni
security forces had surrounded the kidnappers and negotiated the release
of the hostages. “The hostages have been relocated to the nation’s
capital and the situation was peacefully resolved,” the embassy said in
a statement.
Kidnappings are endemic in Yemen and are usually
carried out by disgruntled tribesmen hoping to win concessions from the
government. In the past few years, however, al-Qaida has begun
kidnapping foreigners as well, often with lethal results.
The
airstrike and the ensuing turmoil comes as Yemen is waging an aggressive
campaign against al-Qaida, which has increased its footprint in this
impoverished Arab nation in the southern corner of the Arabian
Peninsula.
The security official said the strike late Monday
night took place in the Wadi Obeida area in Marib province, about 107
miles south of the capital, San’a. The secretary-general of the Marib
council, Sheikh Jabir bin al-Shabwani, and the two bodyguards were hit
as they were driving home, he said.
As daylight came, tribesmen
outraged over the deaths attacked government buildings in the area, blew
up an oil pipeline and threatened to blow up the Marib oil facility,
said the Marib official. He did not provide details on the three who
died in the clashes.
Both officials spoke on condition of
anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, an offshoot of Osama bin Laden’s
terror network, was formed more than a year ago when Yemen and Saudi
militant groups merged.
Militants are believed to have built up
strongholds in remote parts of the country, allying with powerful tribes
that resent the government of President Ali Abdullah Saleh.
Washington has earmarked some $150 million in military assistance to the
Yemeni government to help combat the threat with training, equipment and
intelligence help.
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