(Reuters) - A
senior al Qaeda official wanted by the United States and a local leader
of the militant group's affiliate, Ansar al-Sharia, were killed in a
drone strike in central Yemen overnight, tribal sources and a militant said on Wednesday. Nabil al-Dahab, leader
of Ansar al-Sharia in Yemen's al-Bayda province, was killed along with
four other al Qaeda members, including Shawki al-Badani, the sources
said. Badani is a leader of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) who
is wanted by the United States. Mamoun
Hatem, another AQAP leader, confirmed on his Twitter account that
al-Dahab had been killed by "American planes defending the Houthis
against the charging mujahideen".
The Yemeni Defense Ministry said Badani had been killed, and added
without elaborating that an al Qaeda leader it identified as Abu Maysara
al-Hanaki had been killed by air strikes. The
U.S. State Department had designated Badani as a "global terrorist",
saying he was linked to at least two plots against the U.S. embassy in
Sanaa and a 2012 suicide bombing in the Yemeni capital that killed more
than 100 soldiers. A June
17, 2014, posting on the State Department website said the Yemeni
government had offered a $100,000 reward for information about Badani.
It also reported Yemeni authorities describing him as one of "the most
dangerous terrorists affiliated with al Qaeda". U.S. drone strikes killed at least 10 suspected al Qaeda militants on Tuesday in central Yemen,
where fighting between members of Ansar al-Sharia and rebel Shi'ite
Muslim Houthi fighters also killed 10 people, tribesmen said. Fighting
has flared in different parts of Yemen since the Houthis rose to
dominance in recent months, threatening the fragile stability of a
country that borders Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil exporter. Houthi
forces took over Sanaa in September and fanned out into central and
western Yemen. That antagonized Sunni tribesmen and al Qaeda militants,
who regard the Houthis as heretics. In
the latest advance on Wednesday, residents said Houthi fighters entered
the town of al-Odayn in Ibb province after brief clashes with Ansar
al-Sharia fighters. One
resident who gave his name as Abdulaziz told Reuters by telephone that
Ansar al-Sharia fighters vanished in the early afternoon when the
Houthis arrived. A leader
of the Dahab tribe earlier said that one of Nabil al-Dahab's bodyguards
had been identified as among those killed in the overnight air strike,
but he could not confirm Dahab himself had been killed because other
bodies had been obliterated beyond recognition. Other
residents of Dahab's al-Manaseh village said they could neither confirm
nor deny the reported death of the local Ansar al-Sharia leader, saying
he had not been heard from since the Houthis captured the area last
month. The United States
acknowledges using drones in Yemen but does not comment publicly on the
practice. Sunni Islamist al Qaeda and its affiliates in Yemen are among
the most active wings of the network founded by Osama bin Laden. A
statement issued by residents of the Qifa region, where the past few
days of drone strikes have taken place, complained that the strikes by
both the U.S. drones and the Yemeni air force were targeting "women and
children at home". "Those
who are fighting the Houthis in Radda are the sons of the local tribes,
and those who say they are al Qaeda ...are making these charges to
justify the drones rocketing our houses and killing our families," the
statement said.
Senior al Qaeda operative killed in US strike in Yemen - sources
Reuters
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