Two US drone strikes have killed at least five suspected al-Qaeda militants and destroyed the house of one of them in a mountainous area south of the capital, Sanaa, a Yemeni security official and witnesses said.
The four were killed in the first strike while riding a vehicle in the desert area of Oussab al-Ali, about 140 kilometres south of Sanaa, the official said.
The second strike killed a fifth suspected jihadi, Hamed Radman. A drone bombed his house, the official said. Radman is known to security authorities as influential al-Qaeda member and played a role in recruitment, he said.
A witness in a nearby village said he saw columns of smoke rising into the sky after two explosions rocked the area. He said that US drones have been flying over his village for three days and are still in the sky.
The region, shaped like a triangle and located in the middle of three provinces of central Damar, southern Ibb and eastern Hodeida, has become a hideout for al-Qaeda militants since the Yemeni government intensified its offensive against their former strongholds in the south over the past several months.
The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to reporters.
In Sanaa, Yemeni authorities have raided houses of suspected al-Qaeda members in the past 48 hours, arresting more than 15, including a man whose brother was killed in one of the drone strikes in southern city of Abyan the past months, official said.
The arrests are part of tightening security measures in Sanaa in the vicinity of the foreign embassies, companies and hotels.
Yemen’s al-Qaeda branch, known as al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, is considered the group’s most dangerous.