Militants killed in Yemen were to quit, says tribe leader

Author: 
Reuters
Publication Date: 
Sat, 2011-10-15 22:48

Abu Bakr Al-Awlaki urged Washington and Sanaa to end a wave of air strikes that had killed a number of suspected Al-Qaeda militants in recent months, saying the attacks were exacerbating hatred for the United States.
“The tribe had reached an agreement with a number of its sons accused of belonging to Al-Qaeda to return to the just path, and they were due to return home today, Saturday,” Sheikh Abu Bakr told Reuters by telephone.
“But instead of that, we received them as mutilated corpses.”
Yemeni officials said up to 24 people died in at least three air strikes on militant hideouts in southern Yemen, including the son of US-born cleric Anwar Al-Awlaki, who was killed in a CIA drone attack last month, and his brother.
Both were due to be buried near the town of Azzan, where they died, along with the head of the media department of Al-Qaeda, Egyptian national Ibrahim Al-Banna.
Dozens of people were also injured in the attack, which the Yemeni Defense Ministry said was carried out by its war planes, while local officials and witnesses said they believed foreign aircraft were behind the strikes.
“It is the Americans who take lives without legal basis,” Shaikh Abu Bakr said. “This method paves the way for hostility toward the United States and does not stop Al-Qaeda.”
“The Yemeni and foreign air force must stop flying over our lands,” he said.

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