The following was reported on December 21, 2009;
reposted here for background.
Following a military operation in Yemen targeting suspected al Qa'eda
militants, a local official said on Sunday that 49 civilians, among
them 23 children and 17 women, were killed in air strikes which he said
were carried out "indiscriminately,"
Agence France Presse reported.
Earlier it had been reported by
ABC News that on orders from the US President Barack Obama, the US military had launched cruise missiles in the attacks.
The National
said that thousands of people took to the streets of southern Yemen on
Saturday to denounce the military action and ensuing deaths of innocent
civilians.
"According to local sources, about 3,000 people in
Dhal'e province and hundreds in Lahj and Abyan provinces condemned the
military operation. Angry protesters shouted anti-government slogans
and demanded an investigation into the attack."
The New York Times
said: "The Yemeni government has long struggled to exert authority in
remote and mountainous areas like Abyan, a known refuge for militants
and one of several provinces where al Qa'eda is believed to operate
with relative impunity. Although Yemen has built effective elite
counterterrorism squads in recent years with American assistance, the
country is desperately poor, with shrinking oil reserves. Powerful
tribes also limit the state's control.
"Yemen is also facing
other security threats, including an armed rebellion in the north,
where fighting has flared up in recent months and Saudi forces have
become involved. A secessionist movement in the south has grown worse
in the past year, and some of its leaders are based in Abyan, not far
from where the airstrikes took place Thursday. There is no indication
that the various insurgents targeting Yemen's government are
cooperating, but the concurrent crises have weakened the state's
ability to react.
"In recent months, American officials have
shown increasing concern about al Qa'eda's growing presence in Yemen. A
number of Saudi militants - including former Guantanamo Bay detainees -
have joined the group's Yemeni branch after fleeing Saudi Arabia, which
has cracked down hard on Islamist radicals. American officials have
said they believe that other militants may be fleeing Pakistan and
Afghanistan to the relative safety of Yemen, with its weak central
government and mountainous geography."
AFP
said: "The local official from the Al-Mahfed region, which includes the
village of Al-Maajala where the strike took place, on Sunday confirmed
civilian deaths.
" 'The raid was carried out indiscriminately
and killed 49 civilians, including 23 children and 17 women,' said the
official, who did not wish to be named due to the sensitivity of the
issue.
"A tribal leader from the Al-Kazam tribe too confirmed civilian deaths.
" 'In total, 49 civilians were killed,' he told
AFP.
"Al Qa'eda has chosen to build its training centre on land where
bedouin nomads pitch their tents, and the government forces believe the
nomads harbour al Qa'eda forces,' said the leader, also speaking on
condition of anonymity."
US officials speaking to
The New York Times
confirmed that the United States provided firepower, intelligence and
other support to the government of Yemen as it carried out raids.
"Reluctance
among administration officials to comment on whether American forces
had launched missiles into Yemen appeared to reflect a desire to make
clear that the Yemeni government was in the lead in counterterrorism
operations within its borders. There is a great reluctance among
leaders of many Muslim nations to have any cooperation with the United
States on counterterrorism operations made known. American officials
said some of the strikes against suspected terrorist camps in Yemen
earlier in the week were carried out solely by local forces.
"American
officials said this past summer that they were seeing the first
evidence that dozens of fighters with al Qa'eda, and a small handful of
the terrorist group's leaders, were moving to Somalia and Yemen from
Pakistan. In communications that were being monitored at the Pentagon,
the White House and the CIA, the terrorist groups in all three
locations had begun communicating more frequently, and apparently
trying to coordinate their actions, the officials said."
Reporting for
The Christian Science Monitor
from Sanaa, Laura Kasinof said: "Yemen's central government has been
severely tested in the past year by multiple domestic crises, as well
as an acute economic downturn. There's a war raging in the north that
has recently spilled into Saudi Arabia, a secessionist movement in the
south with alleged ties to the local branch of al Qa'eda, and 35 per
cent of Yemen's population is living on less than $1 a day. The central
government has little control beyond the outskirts of Yemen's major
cities - areas where tribal sheikhs traditionally wield the most power.
Foreign Policy magazine recently ranked Yemen 18th of 177
countries in its 2009 Failed States Index, commenting dryly that
'refugees and extremists were perhaps Yemen's most noteworthy imports
in 2008.'
"However, one US-educated Yemeni government official
has created a 10-step plan that aims to reverse the trajectory of this
Arab nation over the next two years. Commended by President Obama but
characterised as superficial by some Yemenis, it focuses on increasing
the the government's legitimacy by weeding out corruption and enhancing
competence within government ranks.
" 'The cause of the majority
of the problems facing Yemen today is the low level of services
provided by the Yemeni government,' says Jalal Yaqoub, deputy minister
of finance and the plan's author, during an interview. 'If you think
the government is weak then you will take advantage of it, but if you
see that the government is strong then you will think twice.'"
Meanwhile,
The New York Times
reported: "The government of Yemen on Saturday took custody of six
detainees formerly held for years without trial at the United States
military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, according to a senior Obama
administration official and others involved in the process.
"The
transfers, which followed the repatriation of another Yemeni detainee
in September, represent a test run for a policy that the administration
hopes could eventually make possible a sharp reduction in the
population at the prison, which President Obama is trying to close.
"About
91 Yemenis remain at the facility, making up the largest bloc of the
population of about 200 detainees. Though 14 Yemenis were repatriated
from Guantanamo during the Bush administration, concerns about the
Yemeni government's ability and commitment in fighting al Qa'eda, which
has long found a haven in that nation, has made officials reluctant to
repatriate Yemenis in large numbers."
The National.ae