ADEN, Yemen, Feb. 16 (Xinhua) -- Tarek al-Dahab, a local
leader of the Yemen-based al-Qaida wing, was shot dead in an offensive against
his stronghold in the southeastern province of al-Bayda, a security official
said Thursday.
The top leader of al-Qaida terrorist group in al-Bayda
province, about 170 kilometers southeast of the Yemeni capital Sanaa, was
killed overnight after his followers opened fire on military vehicles earlier
in the day.
The al-Qaida militants killed the leader of a Republican
Guard brigade, the head of al-Bayda's election committee along with his son and
two soldiers, the local security official told Xinhua on condition of
anonymity.
Tarek al-Dahab |
"Hours after killing the head of election committee, a
storming campaign backed by pro-government tribal fighters and special forces
of the counter-terrorism units stormed the hideout of al- Dahab and killed him
instantly," the official said.
Witnesses also said that dozens of al-Qaida militants
imposed a siege on the house of tribal leader Hizam al-Dahab, who participated
along with the security forces in the attack against Tarek al-Dahab.
The security situation in al-Manasa area, al-Dahab's native
village, some 30 km southeast of al-Bayda's provincial capital city of Rada, is
"alarming with a large presence of al-Dahab's followers," according
to local residents.
However, a local tribal chief told Xinhua anonymously that
" Tarek al-Dahab was killed by his elder brother Hizam in a mosque during
family disputes not related to any kind of terrorism or Jihadist
arguments."
"Hizam shot down Tarek al-Dahab while he was inside the
mosque, " the tribal chief said.
In January, al-Qaida militants commanded by al-Dahab swept
into Rada and overran it within hours, marking a significant advance by the
extremists towards the capital Sanaa, but he later agreed to quit the city
under a tribal mediation.
Since late January 2011, when protests erupted against
Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh, militants of al-Qaida in the Arabian
Peninsula (AQAP) have been working to bolster their presence in the country's
remote regions.
The group has taken control of several cities and towns
across the restive southern provinces, as the Yemeni government forces engaged
in fierce clashes with the terrorists during the past months, leaving hundreds
of people killed.
The AQAP,
entrenching itself mainly in Yemen's southern provinces of Abyan and Shabwa, is
on the terrorist list of the United States, which considers it as an increasing
threat to its national security.
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