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Earlier this year, nearly 100 Yemeni soldiers were killed and at least 200 wounded when an al-Qaida suicide bomber blew himself up at the parade rehearsal in May. Al-Qaida said at the time it was targeting Ahmed, who was not hurt in the attack. In September, a suicide attacker driving an explosives-laden car blew himself up in the southern city of Aden next to the minister's passing convoy. Ahmed escaped that attack unscathed as well. There was no claim of responsibility, but Yemen's military was battling al-Qaida militants there at the time. A month earlier, the minister's convoy also came under attack in the southern province of Abyan, which was an al-Qaida stronghold at the time. Al-Qaida militants in Yemen took advantage of the political vacuum created during unrest inspired by the Arab Spring last year against longtime authoritarian president Saleh. As government forces were focused on suppressing protests in the capital and elsewhere, al-Qaida seized control of large swaths of land in southern Yemen, governing several major cities for months until the U.S.-backed offensive led by President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi was able to push the militants into hiding. The killing of al-Qaida in Yemen's No. 2 leader was seen as a major breakthrough for U.S. efforts to cripple al-Qaida in Yemen. The impoverished nation on the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula is on the doorstep of Saudi Arabia and fellow oil-producing nations of the Gulf and lies on strategic sea routes leading to the Suez Canal. The operation underlines the heightened cooperation between the U.S. and President Hadi, whose predecessor, Saleh, was long accused by critics of not fighting al-Qaida wholeheartedly, using militants to counter the weight of political opponents and foreign military assistance to bolster military units loyal to him and commanded by members of his family.
[Associated
Press;
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