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  • 11
    Oct
    2012
    6:08am, EDT

    Yemeni security official at US Embassy in Sanaa shot dead, local officials tell AP

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 5:30 p.m. ET: A masked gunman assassinated a Yemeni security official who worked for the U.S. Embassy in a drive-by shooting near his home in the capital Sanaa on Thursday, officials told The Associated Press.

    Yemeni officials told the AP the killing bore the hallmarks of an attack by the al-Qaida offshoot in Yemen, but it was too early to determine whether the group was behind it.


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    The slain official was identified as Qassem Aqlani, a man in his 50s.

    He was walking near his home in western Sanaa, when a gunman on a motorcycle opened fire at him and fled the scene. The embassy is located in eastern Sanaa.

    In a statement, U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said officials were "deeply saddened" by the killing. "We condemn this vicious act in the strongest terms possible and extend our deepest condolences to his family and friends at this difficult time," Nuland said.

    "We are coordinating closely with the Yemeni authorities to investigate this attack and to help bring those responsible to justice."
     

    Aqlani had been working as a Foreign Service national investigator at the embassy for the last 11 years, the State Department said.

    Most recently, he was in charge of investigating a Sept. 12 assault on the U.S. Embassy by angry Yemeni protesters over the anti-Islam film. 

    Protesters stormed the embassy and set fire to a U.S. flag before government forces dispersed them with tear gas. That attack came one day after the killings of the Americans in Benghazi.

    Anti-US protests over Islam film spread in Middle East

    The assassination resembles other attacks recently that have targeted Yemeni intelligence, military and security officials.

    Those attacks are believed to be in retaliation for a military offensive by Yemen's U.S.-backed government against Yemen-based Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), which Washington considers the most dangerous offshoot of the global terror network.

    AQAP has called for attacks on U.S. embassies in a bid to exploit the anti-American sentiment that has swept the Middle East and other parts of the Muslim world in the past month over an anti-Islam film produced in the United States.

    Al-Qaida's revenge? Leading Yemen general killed by suicide bomber

    Initially, the film was linked to an attack on the U.S. Consulate in the Libyan city of Benghazi on Sept. 11 which left four Americans dead including U.S. Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens. U.S. officials said later the attack was not linked to the video.

    AQAP praised the killing of U.S. diplomats in Libya, describing it as "the best example" for those attacking embassies to follow.

    AQAP had taken advantage of a security and political vacuum created by last year Arab Spring-inspired uprising and seized territories and cities in the south. The government-led offensive has pushed the militants out to mountainous areas from where they have been staging suicide attacks and assassinations inside cities.

    Two weeks ago, a top intelligence official, Col. Abdullah al-Ashwal, was also killed in a drive-by shooting in Sanaa.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    398 comments

    Oh no, more terrorism! Time for the Libs, Dems, and Obama to roll out another lie.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: yemen, security, us-embassy, featured, sanaa, qassem-aqlani
  • 13
    Sep
    2012
    5:10am, EDT

    Anti-US protests over Islam film spread in Middle East

    Security forces faced violent protests in Egypt and Yemen spurred by angry mobs accusing the U.S. of insulting the prophet Mohammad. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 10:56 p.m. ET: Protesters angry over an obscure film critical of Islam's Prophet Muhammad stormed the U.S. Embassy in Sanaa, Yemen, on Thursday, as unrest that led to the deaths of a U.S. ambassador and three other Americans in Libya spread to other countries in the region.

    Yemeni security forces fired into the air as demonstrators reached the embassy's grounds, according to The Associated Press and Reuters. The New York Times reported that protesters managed to set fire to a building inside the compound but were forced by security forces to pull back after trying to take furniture and computers.

    A local hospital official said the body of one person had been brought in from the scene of the clashes and medics were trying to determine the cause of death, Reuters reported. A security source told the news agency that at least 15 people were wounded, some from bullets, and 12 people were arrested.

    A Yemeni official said that order had since been restored, but the situation on the ground appeared to remain fluid.

    Demonstrators converge on the American Embassy in Sanaa, Thursday, angered over an anti-Islamic film. NBCNews.com's Al Stirrett reports.



    "Initial reports are that all embassy personnel are safe and accounted for," a U.S. State Department official told NBC News.

    President Barack Obama ordered his administration to do whatever is necessary to protect Americans abroad.

    Speaking at a re-election campaign rally in Golden, Colo., Obama said he and his aides had been in contact with other governments "to let them know they've got a responsibility to protect our citizens." 

    In Yemen, protesters breach the of the U.S. Embassy compound in the capital, Sanaa, as a wave of anti-American demonstrations sweeps across several Middle East nations. NBC's Richard Engel reports from Cairo.

    President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi offered "a personal apology" to Obama over the incident and ordered a swift investigation.

    Libya's deputy interior ministry Hadi blamed "mob-like groups" bent on harming Yemeni-U.S. relations for the attack and promised to ensure they are properly punished, state news agency Saba said.

    In a statement, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said: "The United Nations rejects defamation of religion in all forms. At the same time, nothing justifies the brutal violence which occurred in Benghazi."

    More photos: Angry crowd attacks US Embassy in Yemen

    An Obama administration official told NBC News: "We are doing everything we can to support our mission in Yemen. We've had good cooperation from the Yemeni government which is working with us to maintain order and protect our facilities and people. These protests appear to be motivated by the (anti-Islam) film."

    Reports: Anti-Islam video linked to Christian extremists in US

    By early afternoon local time, the crowd amassed outside the embassy compound in Sanaa appeared to be in the thousands, with witness estimates ranging from about 4,000 to as many as 10,000. The demonstrators smashed windows of security offices outside the embassy and burned cars.

    Yemeni protesters burn US flag
    Before storming the U.S. Embassy compound in Sanaa Thursday, the demonstrators removed the embassy's sign on the outer wall and set tires ablaze. Once inside the compound, they brought down the U.S. flag and burned it.

    Film on al-Jazeera television showed demonstrators jumping up and down on the parapet of the building and scaling the walls.

    The young demonstrators shouted "we redeem, Messenger of God," Reuters reported. Others held aloft banners declaring "Allah is Greatest."

    Yemen is home to al-Qaida's most active branch and the United States is the main foreign supporter of the Yemeni government's counterterrorism campaign. The government on Tuesday announced that al-Qaida's No. 2 leader in Yemen was killed in an apparent U.S. airstrike, a major blow to the terror network.

    The United States, eager to help Yemen recover from the upheaval that put the state on the verge of collapse, has said it would provide $345 million in security, humanitarian and development assistance this year, more than double last year's aid.

    Slideshow: Anger over film spreads around Middle East

    Zoubeir Souissi / Reuters

    The U.S. Ambassador to Libya and three other Americans were killed after protesters angry over a film that ridiculed Islam's Prophet Muhammad stormed the U.S. consulate in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi, as protests spread across the region.

    Launch slideshow

    Meanwhile in Egypt, protesters hurled stones at a police cordon around the U.S. Embassy in Cairo after climbing into the embassy and tearing down the American flag. The state news agency said 13 people were injured in violence that erupted late on Wednesday.

    In Jordan, a fanatic group and a youth movement have called for big demonstration in front of the American embassy in Amman, NBC News' Moufaq Hhatib reported. Jordanian security forces said they will try to prevent them from reaching the embassy and have heightened security measures in the area. The embassy has issued a warning to Americans in Jordan to avoid areas where demonstrations are taking place.

    The unrest followed Tuesday night's attack on the U.S. Consulate in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi, where Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other American were killed. 

    Former Navy SEALs among dead 
    The other three Americans have been identified as Foreign Service information officer Sean Smith and two ex-Navy SEALs Glen Doherty, 42, a native of Winchester, Mass., and Tyrone Woods, 41, of Imperial Beach, Calif.

    On Thursday, the Boston Globe quoted Doherty's sister, Katie Quigley of Marblehead, Mass., as saying that her brother died in the attack on the U.S. facility.

    "He was on security detail and he was protecting the ambassador and also helping the wounded" at the time of his death, she told the newspaper.

    Doherty had served in Afghanistan and Iraq, his sister said. He had been working for a private security firm when he was killed, she told the paper.

    Hani Mohammed / AP

    Yemeni protestors break a door of the U.S. Embassy during a protest about a film ridiculing Islam's Prophet Muhammad Thursday.

    "I never thought he'd be another victim of September 11," the Globe quoted her as saying.

    Two killed in Libya attack identified as ex-Navy SEALs

    President Barack Obama said the killers would be tracked down and ordered two destroyers to the Libyan coast.

    The protesters' anger was triggered by the amateurish anti-Islamic film, a trailer for which appeared on YouTube, although U.S. authorities said Wednesday that they could not rule out the possibility that al-Qaida-inspired Islamist militants had already planned the deadly attack in Libya's second city to coincide with Sept. 11.

     

    There were protests and threats in several other countries in the Middle East.

    On Thursday, the Asaib al-Haq militia threatened U.S. interests in Iraq over the film; the group carried out some of the most prominent attacks on foreigners during the Iraq War.


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    In the Iranian capital, Tehran, Agence France-Presse reported that around 500 demonstrators converged on the Swiss Embassy, which handles American interests in the country in the absence of formal diplomatic relations. Police held back the protesters, but the compound had already been evacuated as a precaution, AFP said.

    About 1,000 Bangladeshi Islamists tried to march on the U.S. Embassy in Dhaka after protests earlier in the week outside U.S. missions in Tunisia, Sudan and Morocco.

    Afghan President Hamid Karzai called the making of the movie a "devilish act" but said he was certain those involved in its production were a very small minority.

    The U.S. Embassy in Kabul appealed to Afghan leaders for help in "maintaining calm" and Afghanistan ordered the YouTube site shut down so Afghans would not be able to see the film.

    In Jordan, the U.S. Embassy in Amman has issued a warning for Americans there. Islamist groups have called for big demonstrations in front of the American embassy during Friday prayers and Jordanian authorities have heightened security measures in the area.

    Many Muslim states focused their condemnation on the film and will be concerned about preventing a repeat of the fallout seen after publication in a Danish newspaper of cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad. That episode touched off riots in the Middle East, Africa and Asia in 2006 in which at least 50 people died.

    Reuters TV

    Protesters outside the U.S. Embassy in Sanaa, Yemen, Thursday.

    Obama speaks to leaders of Egypt, Libya
    On Wednesday night, Obama spoke to the presidents of Egypt and Libya and urged them to continue working with the United States to ensure the safety of diplomats, the White House said.

    Libya arrests 4 in hunt for US Consulate killings

    Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi promised Egypt "would honor its obligation to ensure the safety of American personnel," the White House said.

    Obama told Morsi that while "he rejects efforts to denigrate Islam ... there is never any justification for violence against innocents."

    On Thursday, Morsi said he supported peaceful protest but not attacks on embassies.

    "Expressing opinion, freedom to protest and announcing positions is guaranteed but without assaulting private or public property, diplomatic missions or embassies," he said during a visit to Brussels.

    Timeline: Political fallout from the attack on diplomats in Libya

    Morsi also pledged to protect foreigners in Egypt.

    Challenge for US
    The developments in the Arab world, and especially in Egypt, are shaping up to be a major political and foreign policy challenge for Obama in this election year.

    More Middle East & North Africa coverage on NBCNews.com

    Egypt has been a cornerstone of American policy in the Middle East ever since it became the first Arab country to sign a peace treaty with Israel in 1979.

    Rachel Maddow shares a piece of the interviews by Telemundo anchor and host of Noticiero Telemundo, José Díaz-Balart, talking with President Barack Obama about the U.S. response to the attacks on American missions in Egypt and Libya Tuesday.

    But after popular protests helped oust Egypt's longtime pro-U.S. dictator Hosni Mubarak in 2011, the country's role in American regional policy was thrown into question.

    In an interview with Telemundo on Wednesday, Obama said that while he does not believe Egypt is an ally of the United States, he also does not consider the country an enemy.

    "I think that we are going to have to see how they respond to this incident," Obama said.

    The Obama administration was unhappy with Egypt's apparently tepid initial response to the assault on the U.S. Embassy in Cairo on Tuesday.

    Full World coverage on NBCNews.com

    During a separate call on Wednesday, Obama thanked Libyan President Mohamed Magariaf for his condolences over the deaths of the four Americans in Benghazi.

    The White House said the two leaders agreed to "work together to do whatever is necessary to identify the perpetrators of this attack and bring them to justice."

    On Thursday, Libya's deputy interior minister Wanis Sharif told Reuters that four arrests have been made in the investigation into the attacks on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi. He said the four men were suspected of helping instigate the events at the compound, but provided no other details.

    NBC News staff, The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • US won't rule out Islamist link in killing of US ambassador to Libya
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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    3962 comments

    I wish Muslim leaders would clearly express the fact that committing violence simply because you feel offended is wrong, and that Muslims should treat religious insults from 'infidels' as being totally meaningless. I think some Yemeni are just using the moment as an excuse for violence because they  …

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    Explore related topics: libya, egypt, yemen, state-department, obama, stevens, cairo, featured, benghazi, sanaa, morsi, magariaf
  • 24
    May
    2012
    11:11am, EDT

    Sanaa holds funerals for victims of suicide bombing

    Yemen's Defence Ministry via Reuters

    Soldiers carry coffins during the funeral of dozens of soldiers killed in Monday's suicide bombing in Sanaa on May 24. A man with explosives strapped under his army uniform killed more than 90 people in the Yemeni capital Sanaa on Monday when he blew himself up in the midst of a military parade rehearsal, the defence ministry said.

    Funerals were held today for the victims of Monday's suicide bombing in Sanaa, Yemen. The attacks killed more than 90 people at a military parade rehearsal and wounded about 200 others. On Tuesday, the National Day parade was relocated to air force academy under heavy security. Reuters reports:

    Yemeni soldiers marched in a National Day parade on Tuesday as the president watched from behind a bullet-proof glass shield in a show of defiance after a bomber killed more than 90 troops in an attack on the ceremony's rehearsal.

    A somber mood hung over the event, meant to celebrate the 1990 unification of north and south Yemen, but it passed off without any repeat of Monday's bloodshed despite militant threats to carry out more attacks.

    The bombing, one of the deadliest in Yemen in recent years, was a setback in its battle against Islamists linked to al Qaeda and heightened U.S. concerns over a country in the front line of Washington's global war on militants. Continue reading.

    Mohammed Huwais / AFP - Getty Images

    A Yemeni soldiers sits next to the grave of a comrade who was killed in a suicide bombing that targeted soldiers earlier in the week, at a cemetery in Sanaa on May 24. A suicide bomber clad in a soldier's uniform detonated explosives on May 21 as Yemeni troops were rehearsing for a parade scheduled for May 22, killing 96 soldiers and wounding 300 more.

    Yahya Arhab / EPA

    A Yemeni man walks over graves at a cemetery ahead of burying dozens of soldiers who were killed in a suicide bombing in Sana'a, Yemen, on May 24.

    A suicide bomber blew himself up at a military parade rehearsal in Yemen's capital, killing more than 90 soldiers. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Comment

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  • 21
    May
    2012
    8:05am, EDT

    'Massacre': At least 90 killed as bomber targets military parade rehearsal in Yemen

    A suicide bomber blew himself up at a military parade rehearsal in Yemen's capital, killing more than 90 soldiers. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 12:20 p.m. ET: SANAA, Yemen  - A suicide bomber with explosives strapped under his uniform killed more than 90 people at a military parade rehearsal in the Yemeni capital Sanaa on Monday, an attack which will alarm Washington as its involvement in the front-line state deepens. 

    The bombing also wounded about 200 people, officials said, making it the bloodiest single incident in the city in recent years.

    An al-Qaida source told the BBC that one of its own had carried out the attack.


    Yemen's defense minister and chief of staff were both present at the rehearsal for Tuesday's National Day parade but neither was hurt. A police source said he could not rule out the bombing was an attempt to assassinate them. 

    Weakened by an uprising that eventually toppled former leader Ali Abdullah Saleh, Yemen's government has lost control over whole swathes of the country, allowing militants to overrun several towns in the southern province of Abyan. 


    Follow @msnbc_world

    The attack, along with an ambush on Sunday on a U.S. military training team in the south of the country, indicated their campaign could be entering a dangerous new stage. Troops closed in on a militant strongholds on Sunday in heavy fighting. 

    More than 30 Yemeni troops killed in militant attack

    A U.S. military instructor was seriously wounded in Sunday's ambush, which was claimed by militant group Ansar al-Sharia (Partisans of Islamic Law), which is affiliated to al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). 

    The United States sees Yemen as a vital front in its global war on Islamic militants and is increasing its military support for the government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi.  

    Carnage
    The explosion in Sanaa's Sabaeen Square left scenes of carnage, with bloodied victims and body parts strewn across the 10-lane road where the rehearsal was held on Monday morning, not far from the presidential palace. 

    The defense ministry said at least 90 soldiers were killed and 222 wounded.

    Khaled Abdullah / Reuters

    Police collect evidence after a suicide bombing at a parade ground in Sanaa, Yemen, on Monday.

    "We had just finished the parade. We were saluting our commander when a huge explosion went off," said soldier Amr Habib. "It was a gruesome attack. Many soldiers were killed and others had their arms and legs blown off."

    'Puppet' and 'Stooge': al-Qaida chief al-Zawahiri issues message on Yemen

    Another soldier told the Associated Press: "This is a real massacre. There are piles of torn body parts, limbs and heads. This is unbelievable."

    One investigator said preliminary findings suggested the suicide bomber was a rogue soldier rather than a man in a disguise.

    "The suicide bomber was dressed in a military uniform. He had a belt of explosives underneath," said a man who identified himself as Colonel Amin al-Alghabati, his hands and uniform flecked with blood.

    The usual security procedure for such an event would involve checks being made on the soldiers at their bases before they are transported to the site of the parade in army vehicles.

    The wounded were ferried to hospital in taxis.

    Hospitals overwhelmed
    "Most of the injuries are to the head, we have dozens paralyzed. We expect the death toll to rise. Most of the injured here are boys in their teens. Sanaa's hospitals are overwhelmed," said doctor Mohsen al-Dhahari.

    In response to days of violence, Hadi fired two senior commanders and allies of his predecessor Saleh, who he replaced in February.

    One of them, Yahya Saleh, the former president's nephew, was the head of national security, an intelligence gathering unit that works closely with the CIA. Most of those hurt were from this unit, the BBC reported. 

    Report: Al-Qaida doctors trained to implant bombs in humans

    Yemen has seen a spate of deadly attacks since Hadi took office saying he would extinguish an Islamist insurgency, which until now has been concentrated in the south.

    The parade was scheduled for Tuesday to mark the unification of north and south Yemen, previously separate states, which were merged in 1990.  

    Reuters, The Associated Press and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report. 

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Pakistan blocks Twitter -- but fails to stop tweets
    • NATO summit prompts little buzz on streets of Kabul
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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    299 comments

    Peaceful Muslims, spreading the peace.

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