Middle East

3 Qaeda suspects ‘killed in Yemen drone strike’

A drone attack believed to have been carried out by US forces killed three suspected Al-Qaeda members traveling in a car in southeast Yemen, security and tribal sources said Saturday.
 
Tribesmen said a missile struck the vehicle in the Rafadh region of Shabwa province overnight, killing three.
 
A local security official said they were Al-Qaeda fighters.
 
The United States is the only country known to operate armed drones over Yemen.
 
It has kept up strikes on militants during months of fighting between pro-government forces and Shi'ite Houthi rebels who control the capital.
 
Amnesty International charged Friday that the Saudi-led coalition backing the Yemeni government had renewed its use of cluster bombs during a January air strikes on Sanaa that killed a 16-year-old boy.
 
The coalition has denied using such ammunition in its anti-Houthi attacks on the Yemeni capital.
 
Yemen has been convulsed by unrest since the Houthis seized Sanaa in September 2015.
 
Al-Qaeda's local affiliate has exploited the turmoil to tighten its grip on parts of southeast Yemen, including Mukalla, capital of Hadramawt province.
 
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and the Islamic State jihadist group have also established a foothold in and around the country's main southern city of Aden.
 
Late on Friday, unknown gunmen shot dead a police officer as he returned home in Aden, police said, in the latest in a string of such attacks in the city.

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