Qatar Tribune
First Page Gulf / Middle East World
United States South Asia India
Europe Pakistan  
  
United Kingdom Philippines /SE Asia  
Home About Us Advertising Archives Subscribe Site Map Contact Us
 
 
Friday, May 24 2013
Can Brazil Stop Iran
BRAZIL, the saying used to go, is the land of the future and always will be. But when Brazil's president, Dilma Rousseff, visits the White House next week, she will come as the leader of a country whose future has arrived.
A MIDDLE EAST PEACE PLAN
THERE is so much going on in the Middle East today, it's impossible to capture it all with one opinion. So here are two for the price of one.
Al Watan - Arabic Newspaper
Jamila - Monthly Women Magazine
Nation Business Sports Chill Out
Over hundred militants killed in two days in Yemen

AFP

ADEN TWO suspected Al Qaeda suicide bombers died in Yemen when their payload exploded short of their intended target on Friday, the defence ministry said as it reported a government offensive killed over 100 militants in two days.

The ministry said on its news website 26sep.net that the bomb detonated before the bombers could reach the branch of the government intelligence agency in the main southern city of Aden.

Witnesses said one of the two men was a civilian, and a security official told AFP that the bomb went off outside the entrance gate to the building.

“Two suicide bombers belonging to the Al Qaeda terrorist network were killed when their motorbike exploded... early Friday in Mansura” neighbourhood, 26sep.net reported.

“The bomb-laden motorbike exploded with the two suicide bombers whose bodies were left in pieces before they managed to carry out their suicide attack that targeted a branch of the political security services in Mansura,” it quoted a security official as saying.

No other casualties were reported.

The ministry said the security services had identified one of the two men as Fawaz al- Subaihi, who lived in the neighbourhood, while an investigation was ongoing to identify the second.

A witness in Mansura, who identified Subaihi from his remains, told AFP that the man owned a shop in the area and had “no links to Al Qaeda.” The same witness said that the other man’s body was “torn to pieces.” Al Qaeda’s branch in Yemen, the self-proclaimed Partisans of Sharia (Islamic law), has exploited the decline in central government control that accompanied Arab Springinspired protests that eventually forced president Ali Abdullah Saleh to cede power.

But suicide attacks targeting security forces have intensified since his successor, Abdrabuh Mandur Hadi, took office in February and vowed to continue the US-backed fight against Al Qaeda.

On the day Hadi took the oath as Yemen’s new president, 26 Republican Guard troops were killed in a suicide attack on a presidential palace in the restive country’s southeast.

Al Qaeda later claimed responsibility for the attack.

Security forces have also been locked in battles with the Partisans of Sharia in Abyan’s provincial capital, Zinjibar, since the extremists took over the city in May 2011.

In a statement issued late Thursday, Yemen’s defence ministry said that “more than 100 terrorists have been killed in Abyan over the past two days” in attacks by security forces on their strongholds.

The figures could not be verified from independent sources.

On Tuesday, a source in the Abyan town of Jaar, an Al- Qaeda bastion where the militants’ casualties are usually taken, said the armed forces killed 38 Islamists in two days of air raids and shelling of their hideouts in the region.

Page Number 1 2


Somali PM says he was target of suicide bomber
Iran seeks to promote spiritual leadership of Iraq’s Shiites
25 Indonesian maids on death row in Saudi: Report

  About Us Advertising Subscribe Careers Contact Us