Yemen pledges to ‘uproot terror’ of al qaeda threat in military offensive

Sally

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Mar 22, 2012
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Who knows if they will be successful, but at least they are trying.


YEMEN PLEDGES TO ‘UPROOT TERROR’ OF AL QAEDA THREAT IN MILITARY OFFENSIVE

MAY 18, 2014
By Al Bawaba News

Yemeni authorities pledged to continue to pursue all members of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) organization in Yemen on Saturday, as Sana’a announced the capture of dozens more militants, including an explosives expert believed to be responsible for numerous deaths.

“Operations to monitor and pursue AQAP terrorists are ongoing and will continue until Sana’a has purged them from all areas where they are located,” Yemen’s state SABA news agency quoted a military official as saying.

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Yemen Pledges To 'Uproot Terror' Of Al Qaeda Threat In Military Offensive | Eurasia Review
 
AQ leader killed in Yemen...
:eusa_clap:
YEMEN: AL-QAIDA LEADER KILLED IN THE SOUTH
May 23,`14 -- Yemeni security forces killed an al-Qaida prominent figure in the latest fighting in an offensive against the militant group in the south of the country, the Defense Ministry said Friday.
The ministry identified the militant as an Egyptian by the nom de guerre of Abu Abdel-Rahman al-Masri, but gave no further details on the circumstances of his death. It said the army has gain control of most strongholds of al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula it was targeting in a three-week offensive in the southern province of Shabwa.

Also on Friday in northwestern Yemen, a bomb-laden car hit a checkpoint of Shiite rebels known as Hawthis, killing four of their fighters in Jawf province, security and military officials said. Also, Hawthi rebels clashed with armed tribesmen from the Islamist Islah Party in the city of Amran, northwest of Sanaa, in fighting that left five rebels and six tribesmen dead, the officials said. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to journalists.

Hawthis waged a six-year insurgency in the north, which officially ended in 2010. But the group has recently clashed with Sunni ultraconservatives. The Hawthis, who belong to the Zaydi branch of Shia Islam, accuse the ultraconservatives of trying to spread their school of thought in their strongholds. Mediation efforts and cease-fires have failed to end the tension in the area.

News from The Associated Press
 

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