U.S.,
South African hostages in Yemen killed in rescue attempt
Send a link to a friend
[December 06, 2014]
SANAA (Reuters) - A U.S. journalist
and a South African teacher held by al Qaeda militants in Yemen were
killed during a rescue attempt by U.S. and Yemeni forces, senior
officials said on Saturday.
|
U.S. Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel said al Qaeda militants killed
Luke Somers, 33, and another hostage during the rescue operation.
Major General Ali al-Ahmadi, chief of the national security bureau
in Yemen, said Somers was killed during the raid and other hostages
held by the group had been taken to field hospitals, but gave no
details about them or their condition.
Somers was removed from the scene but died later from a wound he
suffered during the rescue attempt, a senior official in the Yemeni
president's office said.
Relief group Gift of the Givers said teacher Pierre Korkie was also
killed.
"We received with sadness the news that Pierre was killed in an
attempt by American Special Forces, in the early hours of this
morning, to free hostages in Yemen," it said in a statement on its
website.
Yemen's Defence Ministry had earlier said that a military operation
had succeeded in freeing a U.S. hostage as well as killing 10
members of the al Qaeda group holding him.
The operation involved an air strike followed by a raid by U.S. and
Yemeni forces, a local security official said. It took place in the
Wadi Abdan Al Daqqar region of Shabwa Province in southern Yemen and
targeted an al Qaeda group headed by Mubarak al-Harad.
Hagel said the attempt to free the captives was justified. "There
were compelling reasons to believe Mr. Somers' life was in imminent
danger," Hagel said in Kabul.
[to top of second column] |
On Thursday, the United States said it had made a failed attempt
last month to rescue Somers who was kidnapped in Sanaa in September
2013.
A video posted by al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) on
Wednesday purported to show Somers and threatened to kill him if
unspecified demands were not met.
Al Qaeda and allied Islamist militants have a strong presence in
large parts of southern and eastern Yemen, an impoverished Arabian
Peninsula country where the government has little control outside
main cities.
(Reporting By Peter Salisbury and Mohammed Ghobari in Sanaa, Yara
Bayoumy in Manama, Mohammed Mukhashaf in Aden, Phil Stewart in
Kabul; Writing Angus McDowall; Editing by Janet Lawrence)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|