Aden - Arab Today
Yemeni soldiers near a rocket launching during a major offensive against Al-Qaeda
Yemeni troops killed two suspected militants when they shelled the house of a local Al-Qaeda chief in the southern Shabwa province, a military official said Tuesday. The overnight artillery strike hit near Al-Saeed, one of several towns in Shabwa
targeted in an ongoing government offensive against Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
It resulted in "the death of Nasser and Ahmed bin Atef, brothers of local Al-Qaeda chief (Saad bin Atef), both of whom are active members in the network," the official told AFP.
The official did not say whether Saad was present at the time of the shelling.
The Yemeni army also seized an Al-Qaeda stronghold in the neighbouring province of Abyan, another military official said, as it pressed an eight-day-old offensive with support from tribal militias.
"We entered Wadi Dhiqa this morning, a major stronghold of AQAP militants ... who fled under the pressure of troops to Al-Koor," a mountainous region nearby, the source said.
It was not immediately possible to independently verify the military's claims.
The army killed 40 suspected Al-Qaeda members on Sunday, mostly in Shabwa and the central province of Baida, according to the defence ministry.
State news agency Saba on Monday published the names of six Saudis among the killed militants.
So far, 72 militants and more than 24 soldiers have been killed in the military's latest operations, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
AQAP took advantage of the 2011 uprising that forced veteran strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh from power to seize swathes of southern and eastern Yemen.
The army recaptured several major towns in 2012 but has struggled to reassert control over some rural areas, despite the backing of militiamen recruited from local tribes.
The latest government campaign came after a wave of air raids and US drone strikes on Al-Qaeda bases and training camps last month that killed around 70 militants.
The jihadist group denounced the offensive as a "premeditated military escalation" that came after "the Yemeni defence minister visited Washington to receive the orders of his American masters".
Source: AFP