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Sprintcyclist
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"AN al-Qaeda-linked Islamist group which claimed responsibility for a deadly attack on the US embassy in Yemen has threatened more strikes against Western interests in the poverty-stricken nation.
A Yemeni security source said 25 suspects had been arrested over yesterday's car bombing and rocket attack on the highly-fortified US mission in Sanaa which killed six soldiers, four civilians and six assailants.
The Organisation of Islamic Jihad said it was demanding the release of militants being held by the Yemeni authorities, which have been battling a wave of attacks by al-Qaeda extremists over the past few years.
"We, the Organisation of Islamic Jihad, belonging to the al-Qaeda network, repeat our demand of (Yemeni President) Ali Abdullah Saleh to free our detained brothers within 48 hours," said a statement signed by self-proclaimed leader Abu Ghaith al-Yamani.
The group vowed it would continue attacks "against Western interests," Yemeni public figures and the Saudi embassy in the capital.
It also called for the closure of the US and British missions in the Arabian peninsula republic, the ancestral homeland of al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden, who remains at large seven years after the September 11 attacks of 2001.
The US embassy bombing was the second strike on the compound in six months, and the latest in a spate of attacks against Western interests and oil installations in the country, one of the poorest on the planet.
A Yemeni security source said the 25 suspects were rounded up in Sanaa in a manhunt launched yesterday that continued through the night.
"The security services tracked down all the suspects," the source said.
Islamic Jihad said it would "pursue a series of explosions according to our pre-established plan" and threatened to blow up the embassies of Britain, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates if its "brothers" were not freed from Yemeni prisons.
Last month, the authorities said they arrested 30 al-Qaeda suspects in a crackdown on the network.
"This attack is a reminder that we are at war with extremists who would murder innocent people to achieve their ideological objectives," US President George W Bush said.
Witnesses said a fierce firefight erupted yesterday after gunmen raked Yemeni police guarding the embassy compound before a suicide bomber blew up a car at the entrance, setting off a fireball.
A series of explosions followed as the compound came under rocket and small arms fire, they said, adding that the force of the bomb blast hurled pieces of flesh 100 metres.
State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the strike bore "all the hallmarks of an al-Qaeda attack."
The US mission said yesterday that both the embassy and consular sections were closed after the attack, but it was not immediately known if they were now open. "
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24368384-12377,00.html
If they are so poor, how do they afford bombs ?? I guess it is a question of priorities.
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