Yemeni soldiers inspect a car at a checkpoint in the capital Sanaa.—AFP Photo

SANAA: Five al-Qaeda militants were killed in an air strike on their car in Yemen's Bayda province on Tuesday after deadly unrest there, and with the air force blasting jihadist positions in nearby Abyan, security officials said.

“A fighter jet raided a car carrying five al-Qaeda militants,” said the official. “All five were killed.” A tribal chief confirmed the raid, which came hours after another security official said three policemen were killed in a suicide attack in Bayda early on Tuesday.

“Three policemen were killed and six others were wounded in a suicide attack on a checkpoint in Suwadeya,” the official said, referring to a village in Bayda, in Yemen's south.

After the attack, carried out with a bomb-laden vehicle, clashes broke out between extremists and security forces in which the province's al-Qaeda chief, Naser al-Dhafri, and another militant were killed, the source said.

He accused Dhafri of being the “mastermind” behind Tuesday's attack.

The official, requesting anonymity, said the Qaeda militants killed in the raid were on their way to support those locked in clashes with the police, adding that extremists managed to capture two policemen during the fighting.

A military official said the Yemeni air force also carried out strikes on Tuesday targeting al-Qaeda positions, including a suspected training camp, in neighbouring Abyan province, where an attack on an army camp last week killed 185 soldiers.

“Yemeni air forces launched six raids on Tuesday against al-Qaeda posts in Jaar,” an al-Qaeda stronghold in Abyan, said the official, also speaking on condition of anonymity.

“Three raids targeted an al-Qaeda weapons hideout and a training camp west of Jaar,” and three targeted other al-Qaeda positions southwest of the town, he added. No casualties were immediately reported.

Residents there, contacted by AFP, confirmed the raids but could not say if they were carried out by US drones or Yemeni air forces.

On Sunday, three extremists were killed when US drones fired missiles targeting their weapons hideouts in a hill overlooking Jaar, with another six killed in artillery fire by the Yemeni army on one of their positions southeast of Jaar.

Tuesday's violence follows a string of bloody attacks by the jihadist network against security forces that have rocked Yemen since former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, who ruled the country for 33 years, stepped down last month.

And it comes just hours after the interior ministry issued a statement warning of “a terrorist plot by al-Qaeda to target vital installations and government facilities in several provinces.”

“The al-Qaeda network is planning to carry out terrorist operations using bomb-laden vehicles,” it said.

Opinion

Editorial

Genocide resumes
Updated 19 Mar, 2025

Genocide resumes

It appears that Palestinian people will again be left defenceless in the face of merciless brutality.
Strength in unity
19 Mar, 2025

Strength in unity

WILL it count as an opportunity lost? Given the sharp escalation in militant violence in recent weeks, some had ...
NFC weightage
19 Mar, 2025

NFC weightage

THE NFC Award has long been in need of an overhaul. The government’s proposal to bring down the weightage of...
A new direction
Updated 18 Mar, 2025

A new direction

While kinetic response may temporarily disable violent actors, it will not address underlying factors providing ideological fuel to insurgencies.
BTK settlement
18 Mar, 2025

BTK settlement

WHEREVER the money goes, controversy follows. The PMLN-led federal government, which recently announced that it will...
Sugar crisis
18 Mar, 2025

Sugar crisis

GREED knows no bounds. But the avarice of those involved in the sugar business — from manufacturers to retailers...