Yemen Army Shells Qaida Posts, Kills 12
Yemen's army shelled al-Qaida positions in the southern city of Zinjibar on Tuesday, killing 12 of the extremists, a local government official told Agence France Presse.
"Twelve al-Qaida militants were killed when the army fired artillery shells and Katyusha rockets on their positions across several areas in Zinjibar," said the official in the adjacent town of Jaar, where the militants were buried.
A military official confirmed the shelling but said he could not yet provide a toll.
In May, militants from al-Qaida branch in Yemen who declare themselves the Partisans of Sharia (Islamic law), took control of Zinjibar, triggering nine months of fighting between militants and government troops.
Tribal and government officials said on February 4 that the government is trying to negotiate the withdrawal of the extremists from the city, which is the capital of Abyan province.
So far, at least three tribal-mediated negotiation attempts to secure a militants withdrawal have failed.
Hundreds of people have been killed in the fighting and more than 90,000 residents displaced.
On January 25, hundreds of al-Qaida gunmen bowed to tribal pressures and withdrew from the town of Rada, 130 kilometers southeast of the capital Sanaa.
Rada was overrun on January 16, the latest in a series of towns and cities to fall as al-Qaida takes advantage of a central government weakened by months of anti-regime protests.
Heavily armed tribes, which play a vital role in Yemeni politics and society, have been joining the army to battle militants linked to al-Qaida who have taken over several regions across the country's south and east.