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Al Qaeda kidnaps and kills 14 Yemeni troops

Published: 10 Aug 2014 - 12:22 am | Last Updated: 23 Jan 2022 - 04:26 am

ADEN: Al Qaeda militants kidnapped 14 Yemeni soldiers returning home by bus from duty in eastern Yemen on Friday and executed them in what officials said was an apparent act of revenge for a recent army crackdown in the area.
The Yemeni army has recently sent extra troops to the Wadi Hadramout region in northeastern Yemen to confront attempts by Al Qaeda’s local affiliate, Ansar Al Sharia, to declare an Islamic emirate in the main regional city of Seiyoun.
Residents and officials said people in the area found the bodies of the 14 riddled with bullets on a road near Seiyoun, three hours after they were abducted from a public bus.
Ansar Al Sharia, in an internet posting late on Friday, confirmed its militants had ambushed and killed the soldiers for taking part in military operations against the group.
“The mujahideen ordered the soldiers down from the bus, interrogated them, and checked their military IDs and that they belonged to contingents based in Seiyoun,” the group said in a news report posted online.
“The mujahideen then led the soldiers to the city market, delivered a speech clarifying that the captive soldiers had participated in the latest campaign against Sunni Muslims in Wadi Hadramout, and thus the mujahideen decided to kill them as a punishment for their crimes,” it added.
The group also posted pictures of the soldiers in civilian clothes surrounded by the militants concealing their faces with traditional head dresses as they checked the ID cards. One photo showed the soldiers sitting on the floor surrounded by the militants, also in plain clothes.
Residents said the soldiers, who had been travelling to visit families in Sanaa, some 600 km away, were all shot several times with automatic rifles.
“It looks as if it was an act of revenge,” an official in the area said.
Stability of Yemen, one of the poorest countries in the Arab World, is an international concern. The country of 25 million people shares a long border with Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter, which militants tried to breach last month in an attack that killed six militants and four Saudi border guards.
Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), emboldened by a power vacuum in the political turmoil following a 2011 uprising that ousted President Ali Abdullah Saleh, is trying to carve out areas of dominance in south and east Yemen. 

REUTERS