YEMENIS PROTEST AFTER US DRONE ATTACK KILLS 7 IN SHABWA
Yemenis Protest after US Drone Attack Kills 7 in Shabwa |
Thousands of Yemenis have taken to the
streets of the southern province of Shabwa after a US drone attack killed at
least seven civilians.
The January 28 drone attack decimated
a car carrying at least six male members of the same family and another
individual as they were searching for a "missing child" in Shabwa's
Said district, residents said.
Saleh al-Aishi al-Ateeqi, a relative
of one of the victims who organised the protest, told local media that
"the victims were all innocent civilians who had nothing to do with any
political or religious organisation."
Speaking at a protest in the city of Ateq
on Sunday, Al-Ateeqi blamed the Arab coalition at war with Yemen for the
deaths, saying it was responsible for the country's airspace and protecting
civilian lives.
Sky News gains rare access to Yemen, where the civil war is causing one of the world's worst humanitarian crises pic.twitter.com/3pZ1wmyaEZ— Sky News (@SkyNews) February 5, 2018
The United States is the only force
known to operate armed drones over Yemen and does not normally comment on its
operations.
INCREASE IN ATTACKS UNDER TRUMP
Washington has stepped up its use of
drone attacks under President Donald Trump, with the Bureau of Investigative
Journalism reporting at least 125 drone attacks last year.
The increased bombing comes despite a
botched American raid against al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) that
killed a number of civilians on January 29, 2017.
The raid on Yakla, an impoverished and
desolate town, resulted in the deaths of at least 16 civilians, including women
and children.
The January 2017 raid attracted
widespread media attention because one Navy SEAL was also killed in what marked
the first operation of its kind authorised by Trump.
AQAP and the local affiliate of the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, known as ISIS) have exploited
Yemen's three-year war to carry out assassinations and bombings, mostly in
lawless areas in the south.
According to the United Nations, more
than 10,000 people have been killed in fighting - nearly half of them civilians
- since a Saudi-led coalition launched air attacks on Yemen in March 2015.
SOURCE:
AL JAZEERA
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