Thursday, September 23, 2010

Yemen intensifies fight against the al Qaeda

Yemeni forces have laid siege to a southern town believed to be a militant stronghold in what amounts to an intensified effort to the combat terrorism, a senior defense of the official said on Thursday.

Human rights groups, meanwhile, have voiced the concerns about thousands of the people displaced in the escalation of fighting.

In an exclusive interview with CNN, Rashad al-Alimi, Yemen's deputy prime minister for defense and security, said Yemeni forces have surrounded the village of the Hawta in the southern Shabwa province, a stronghold for the offshoot terrorist group al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

Yemeni forces are also tracking the movements of the U.S. citizen Anwar al-Awlaki, a Muslim cleric who is one of the leaders of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. He is believed to be holed up in the Rafad Valley of the Shabwa.

Al-Alimi said security forces have surrounded that area, where they have launched previous offensives against al Qaeda elements.

He said the militants have attempted to use local residents as human shields, but Yemen is determined to wipe out the extreme elements.

"The government is insisting on finding these terrorists and bringing them to justice, because we will never allow Yemen to be a safe haven for al Qaeda," al-Alimi said.


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