Air strikes killed at least 33 suspected Al-Qaeda militants in Yemen, in the first such action since a massive attack on the army, local officials said yesterday.
The sources said 27 were killed and 55 wounded in air raids which residents said were carried out by US warplanes on positions in a mountainous area of Al-Bayda province, south of the Yemeni capital.
“They were new recruits, youths from the region, taken by surprise by the raids which struck as they were dining in training camps” on Friday night, one official said, on condition of anonymity.
The raids hit three villages west of the provincial capital, also called Al-Bayda – Al-Makhnaq, Al-Dooqi and Al-Mamdud, the sources said.
Yesterday, Yemeni planes raided the southern province of Abyan, killing six militants, a local official said. He said positions near Jaar, 12 kilometres from the militant-held town of Zinjibar, were hit.
The air strikes were the first since a massive March 4 attack on an army camp in Abyan province claimed by the jihadists’ Yemeni branch, Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) that cost the lives of 185 soldiers.
Residents said the raids in Al-Bayda were carried out by US aircraft, but the accounts could not be immediately verified.
Yemen is the ancestral homeland of slain Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and the jihadist network took advantage of a protracted anti-government uprising last year to seize large swathes of the south and east.