"Three women and a child were among 14 people killed in Sunday's strike near the town of Radaa, 130 kilometres (80 miles) southeast of Sanaa, targeting Al-Qaeda's Abdelrauf al-Dahab who escaped unharmed, local officials said."
MQ-1B Predator. (photo: AFP/USAF)
Protests in Yemen After US Drone Kills 14 Civilians
05 September 12
anaa — Yemeni authorities have sent tribal representatives to investigate civilian deaths in an apparent US drone strike targeting an Al-Qaeda commander, one of them told AFP on Tuesday.
Three women and a child were among 14 people killed in Sunday's strike near the town of Radaa, 130 kilometres (80 miles) southeast of Sanaa, targeting Al-Qaeda's Abdelrauf al-Dahab who escaped unharmed. local officials said.
Initial reports said the male dead were Al-Qaeda militants but other sources said they were fellow tribesmen of Dahab unconnected to the jihadist network. "We have been sent by the government to establish the reasons for the error," delegation member Tawfic al-Jahmi said.
The suspected drone fired two rockets, one of which missed the vehicle carrying Dahab and the second of which hit a following minibus killing all those inside.
Angry relatives of the dead blocked the main road linking Radaa to the town of Dhammar and the capital beyond.
Jahmi said his delegation had received an undertaking to reopen the highway in return for a promise of 20 million rials (nearly 100,000 dollars) in compensation.
The Common Forum bloc of former opposition groups now in the national unity government in Sanaa condemned the "killing of civilians by a drone."
The United States is the only country that has drones in the region and in recent months has been carrying out strikes on Al-Qaeda targets in the south and east of the country.
Dahab is the brother of Tareq al-Dahab, who led Al-Qaeda fighters in a January raid in which they overran Radaa, the closest they have reached to the capital. The militants abandoned the city later the same month, bowing to tribal pressure.
Tareq Dahab was killed in February.
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula took advantage of the weakness of the central government during last year's protests against ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh to expand its presence in the impoverished country.
Al-Qaeda loyalists have carried out a spate of deadly attacks against Yemeni security forces and their militia allies since Saleh's successor President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi came to power pledging to crush the militants.
In an all-out offensive launched in May, the army retook a string of towns in Abyan province in the south.
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think he'll apologize at the convention?
he should be prosecuted. for mass murder.
i feel morally and legally constrained from voting for a war criminal.
why don't you? romney? irrelevant.
Why call the people of Yemen "tribesmen" as if to suggest that they are somehow primitive and lawless. Sometimes, the mass media even use the term "lawless regions" to describe the areas where the US bombs with drones. "Lawless" in what sense. Why would they care about US law. They have their own laws and customs. They are not lawless. In fact they are perfectly lawful. It is the use of drones that is tribal and lawless.
Drones are named things like "predator" for a reason. They are predatory.
And why drag the name "al Qaeda" into this. The US says there are al Qaeda in the area in order to legitimize its bombing as if al Qaeda were by definition lawless and therefore OK to kill on sight. Why are US drone operations not lawless and OK to kill on sight.
The US supports, arms, and funds al Qaeda in Syria. It is not killing Al Qaeda in Libya or Mali.
This article does not even hint at why the US is at war against Yemen. It is worthless as news. IT only repeats the standard propaganda formula. If a lie is repeated often enough, people begin to accept it as truth.
This article is just trash.
So Obama, you didn't get your guy and you have the blood of 14 brown skinned, dirt poor people on your hands. How does that make you feel?
Al Qaeda means "base" as in software base used to launder drug money. The names don't matter, the deeds do.
Where is Indira Singh?
Do William Binney and Bluffdale, Utah have anything in common?
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