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Group tied to Al-Qaeda threatens suicide attacks in Yemen

Published May 12th, 2002 - 02:00 GMT
Al Bawaba
Al Bawaba

A group claiming to have links with terror suspected mastermind Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda network threatened Saturday to carry out suicide attacks in Yemen if 173 people allegedly detained in Sanaa were not released. 

 

The "Sympathizers of the al-Qaeda Organization," threatened to carry out "suicide attacks against anyone betraying his religion and his people" and also claimed responsibility for Thursday's TNT attack near the house of Yemeni Prime Minister Abdul Qader Bajammal. 

 

"We think our message has not yet reached the apostates. We have understood that our message can only reach them through bloodshed," the group said in a statement to AFP

 

The group had already vowed to carry out "martyrdom operations against premises of the intelligence service in all provinces and senior political figures" unless 173 persons it said were held at intelligence headquarters were freed by May 10. 

 

The statement said Thursday's attack, which only caused material damage, "was the last in a series of blasts with no bloodshed and causing no human losses." 

 

In addition, it said Yemen was "colonized by the Americans who support the Zionist entity (Israel) with our oil wealth" and promised the Yemeni people to deliver "a blow to traitors" if the 173 were not released. 

 

"The only accusation against the 173 is that they belong to the al-Qaeda organization," which the United States has blamed for the September 11 attacks, the group had said in its April 12 statement. 

 

The statement was sent from an e-mail address in the name of Salem al-Rabeei, one of the Yemeni prisoners held at a U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, and brother of Fawaz al-Rabeei, who was said by the FBI last February to be possibly planning a strike in the United States or against United States interests in Yemen. 

 

It charged that the Yemeni intelligence service was also detaining the wives of some militants and a number of elderly men, including the fathers of Rabeei and Samir al-Hada. Authorities said last February that Hada was an al-Qaeda suspect shot dead when he tried to throw a grenade at police. (Albawaba.com) 

© 2002 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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