Sanna - Unidentified assailants opened fire on the motorcade
of Yemen’s prime minister on Saturday, an aide said, in an apparent
assassination attempt that underscored the volatility of the U.S.-allied Arab
country.
Ali al-Sarari, an adviser to Prime Minister Mohammed Salem
Basindwa, said no one was hurt in the attack which happened in the evening in
Sanaa while the premier was returning home from his office.
No one has claimed responsibility for the attack. But Yemen
is home to Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), considered one of the most
aggressive branches of the global militant organization, which has previously
targeted top officials.
“We strongly condemn this brazen assassination attempt and
remain committed to supporting Yemen as it pursues meaningful and peaceful
reform through its ongoing transition process,” a U.S. State Department
official said in Washington.
President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi said last week that the
AQAP’s leader had vowed in an intercepted phone call to carry out an attack
that would “change the face of history”, and that this was what had led to the
temporary closure of many U.S. and other Western embassies in the Middle East,
Africa and Asia earlier in August.
Sarari said Basindwa’s guards identified the license plates
of the car used in the attack and security forces were trying to track it down
after the assailants fled the scene.
Basindwa was chosen to head a government of national unity
in 2011 after long-serving President Ali Abdullah Saleh quit under a
Gulf-brokered power transfer deal that propelled his deputy, Hadi, to power.
The U.S. government supports Yemeni forces with funds and
logistical support, and has regularly used drones to hunt down al Qaeda
militants.
A local Yemeni source said on Friday that four suspected
militants were killed in a U.S. drone strike in the central al-Bayda province.
But the Interior Ministry said on Saturday that five local
al Qaeda leaders, all from the same extended family, died in an air strike in
al-Bayda province.
It identified them as Qa’ed al-Dahab, Ali Jalloud al-Dahab,
al-Hamdani al-Arbaji al-Dahab, Deifallah Ahmed Deifallah al-Dahab and Mohammed
al-Doukhi al-Dahab.
Local sources identified Qa’ed al-Dahab as the commander of
an al Qaeda-linked group in al-Bayda and said he had previously escaped at
least two drone strikes.
Apart from the al Qaeda threat, Yemen is grappling with a
host of challenges as it tries to restore state control over the country after
months of turmoil in 2011 that saw Saleh step down.
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