Sana'a, Yemen - Yemeni police have broken up an al-Qaeda
cell that has been plotting terrorist attacks against foreign
interests and government facilities in the capital Sana'a, an online
news outlet reported Tuesday.
Officers from the National Security Agency raided the cell and
arrested all its members late on Monday, the RayNews web site said,
without giving numbers of those arrested.
It said the group's leader, Riydh al-Salehi, was among the
arrested suspects. The report describes al-Salehi as a 'leading
member of al-Qaeda in Yemen.'
The authorities did not comment on the report.
Yemen's Interior Ministry has said that security forces had
arrested 11 suspected members of the al-Qaeda terrorist network in
Sana'a late in May. It said the detained suspects gave information
during questioning about acts of terror carried out by the network.
An al-Qaeda arm in Yemen has claimed responsibility for several
mortar attacks in Sana'a in the past few months, including one that
targeted a residential compound housing US citizens on April 6 and
another against the US embassy on March 18.
On Sunday, Yemeni Vice President Abdu-Rabu Mansour Hadi said his
country had expelled 16,000 suspected members of the al-Qaeda network
since 2005 as part of its efforts to fight terrorism.
Hadi said the expelled suspects belonged to various nationalities
and many of them were those known as the Arab Afghans.
Arab Afghans are Muslim Jihadi veterans from various Arab
countries who had fought against the Soviet army in Afghanistan in
the 1980s. Yemen received thousands of those militants after the war
ended in 1989.
Hadi said the suspected militants were sent back to their home
countries between 2005 and 2008. He did not name any of the
countries.
After the September 11, 2001 attacks on New York and Washington,
Yemen allied itself with the United States in the so-called war on
terrorism and cracked down on armed groups affiliated with al-Qaeda.
Security forces have also rounded up hundreds of Arab Afghans and
foreign students at unregistered religious schools across the Arabian
Peninsula country.
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