Yemeni troops Saturday shot dead five Al-Qaeda suspects disguised as
women who fired at a soldier during a checkpoint inspection of their
Saudi-bound bus, officials said.
Another suspect and the driver
were wounded in the shooting in Harad, a town 15 kilometres (nine miles)
from the Saudi border, the officials said, adding that two of those
killed were Saudis.
"As one of the
soldiers climbed on board the bus for an inspection, one of the
suspects opened fire and wounded him, prompting shooting from other
soldiers at the checkpoint," said a government official who gave the
toll.
All six had been dressed in black robes and wore the niqab,
a face-covering veil commonly worn by women in Yemen, the official in
Harad told AFP.
A suicide belt and arms were also found on the
bus, and the wounded suspect and driver were being questioned, said the
security official.
"The men are suspected of affiliation with Al-Qaeda and were heading north towards Yemen's border with Saudi Arabia," he said.
Yemen security forces rarely carry out inspections of vehicles carrying
women in the conservative, deeply-tribal Muslim country.
In July, six Saudi Al-Qaeda suspects attacked a post on the border with Yemen, killing five security officers.
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula took advantage of a collapse of
central authority in the wake of the 2011 uprising to seize swathes of
southern and eastern Yemen.
The United States considers AQAP to be the global jihadist network's most dangerous affiliate.
Saudi Arabia, which launched a huge crackdown on Al-Qaeda following a
spate of deadly attacks in 2003-2006, is building a three-metre
(10-foot) high fence along its southern frontier with Yemen to counter
illegal crossings and arms smuggling.
Yemen has been wracked by violence since a Shiite militia known as the Huthis seized control of the capital in September.
The militiamen have clashed with local Sunni tribes and Al-Qaeda militants as they seek to expand their territory.
Several Huthi militiamen were killed and 10 tribesmen wounded in
fighting Friday in Arhab, 35 kilometres (20 miles) from Sanaa, according
to sources on both sides.
Arhab is close to Sanaa International Airport and is a stronghold of the Sunni Islamist Al-Islah party.
Later on Saturday, tribal sources said armed tribesmen handed Arhab
over to the Huthis following mediation that led to an end of fighting.
In Sanaa, hundreds protested outside President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi's
residence demanding action against the militiamen, whom they accused of
arrests and killings.
"Huthis and Al-Qaeda are the same. Hadi, either find a solution (to end their control) or leave."
The rise of the Huthis has challenged Hadi's authority, an ally of the
United States, and violence has continued despite UN-backed efforts to
find a political solution.
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