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A Predator B drone taxis at the Naval Air Station in Corpus Christi, Texas. Photo: AP

US drones kill at least eight suspected al-Qaeda militants in Yemen

US drone strikes killed at least eight suspected al-Qaeda militants in Yemen yesterday, bringing the number of people killed by drones in less than two weeks to at least 25.

NYT

US drone strikes killed at least eight suspected al-Qaeda militants in Yemen yesterday, bringing the number of people killed by drones in less than two weeks to at least 25.

The strikes follow Yemen's announcement on Wednesday that it had foiled a plot by al-Qaeda to seize two major oil and gas export terminals and a provincial capital in the east of the country.

Warnings of potential attacks have pushed Washington to shut missions across the Middle East, and the United States and Britain to evacuate staff from Yemen.

Witnesses and local officials in Maareb, a mostly desert region in the southeast where militants have taken refuge, said a drone fired at two vehicles suspected of carrying al-Qaeda militants at dawn, killing six people.

Residents saw the two vehicles rise in flames and the drone circled the air for a while after the attack. Another two were killed in the eastern region of Hadramout, local officials said.

At least 25 suspected militants have been killed since July 28, when a drone strike killed at least four members of Ansar al-Sharia, a local militant group affiliated to al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, one of the most active branches of the network founded by Osama bin Laden.

More violence took place in northern Yemen also yesterday when five followers of puritanical Sunni Islam were killed in an ambush by Shiites.

The attack occurred in Saada, a town near the border with Saudi Arabia about 130 kilometres north of the capital, Sanaa. Saada has been under the control of Shiite Houthi rebels for several years. The five were driving a vehicle when they came under fire in an ambush which injured a further two.

Yemen, one of the poorest Arab countries, is one of handful of nations where Washington acknowledges targeting militants with strikes by drone aircraft, although it does not comment publicly on the practice.

US sources have said intercepted communication between bin Laden's successor Ayman al-Zawahiri and al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula was one part of the intelligence behind the alert last week that prompted the closure of the embassies.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Yemen foils al-Qaeda plot to seize oil port, kill workers
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