Yemen's Qaeda executes Saudi members for 'spying' for US


(MENAFN- Gulf Times) Al-Qaeda in Yemen executed Wednesday two Saudi accused of spying for the United States, a day after the jihadist group confirmed the death of its leader in a US drone strike.

They were accused of planting tracking chips in vehicles and clothes used by Al-Qaeda leaders, allowing drones to target them, a local official in southeastern Mukalla said.

After their public execution by a firing squad in the Al-Qaeda-held city, their bodies were tied to poles, the official and witnesses said.

Yemen-based Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, considered by Washington as the most dangerous affiliate of the global jihadist network, was formed in 2009 following a merger of the Yemeni and Saudi branches.

AQAP confirmed in an online video dated June 15 the death of its leader Nasir al-Wuhayshi, who was number two in Al-Qaeda, along with two other militants in a US drone strike last week.

Two other senior Al-Qaeda leaders in Yemen - ideologue Ibrahim al-Rubaish and Nasser al-Ansi, who appeared in a video claiming the January massacre on French magazine Charlie Hebdo - were killed in similar US strikes in April.


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