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Yemen al-Qaeda chief al-Wuhayshi killed in US strike | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Al-Qaeda has confirmed that Nasser al-Wuhayshi, the leader of its offshoot in the Arabian Peninsula, has been killed in a US drone strike in Yemen. | |
His death was announced by the AQAP group in an online video. His successor was named as military chief Qasim al-Raymi. | |
Wuhayshi was seen as al-Qaeda's second-in-command and was a former private secretary to Osama Bin Laden. | |
He built one of the most active al-Qaeda branches, say US officials. | |
In Yemen, resurgent al-Qaeda militants have seized territory and infrastructure - indirectly assisted by Saudi-led airstrikes on the rebel Houthi movement, their Shia Muslim foes. | |
But the deaths of a number of leading figures in AQAP in recent months have reportedly fuelled rumours among supporters that it has been successfully targeted by intelligence agencies. | |
The Yemeni news group al-Masdar Online previously reported (in Arabic) that Wuhayshi was killed in an attack in Hadramawt province last Friday. | |
"We in al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula mourn to our Muslim nation... that Abu Baseer Nasser bin Abdul Karim al-Wuhayshi, may God have mercy on his soul, passed away in an American strike which targeted him along with two of his mujahideen brothers," Khaled Batarfi, a senior member of the group, said in the video. | |
The Pentagon has previously said it would not comment on the killing - which the Site intelligence group has said would constitute the biggest strike on al-Qaeda since Bin Laden's death in Pakistan in 2011. | |
The US State Department offered a $10m (£6.4m) reward for anyone who could help bring Wuhayshi - who is believed to have been in his 30s - to justice. | |
It said he was "responsible for approving targets, recruiting new members, allocating resources to training and attack planning, and tasking others to carry out attacks". | It said he was "responsible for approving targets, recruiting new members, allocating resources to training and attack planning, and tasking others to carry out attacks". |
Wuhayshi, himself a Yemeni, travelled to Afghanistan in the late 1990s where he trained and went on to fight in the battle of Tora Bora in late 2001 before escaping into Iran. | |
There he was arrested and extradited to Yemen, where he was jailed until he escaped in 2006. | |
'Greater and worse' | |
He became head of al-Qaeda in Yemen and then head of AQAP when the Yemeni and Saudi branches of al-Qaeda merged in 2009. | |
When Bin Laden was killed, Wuhayshi warned Washington that al-Qaeda was not dead. | |
"What is coming is greater and worse, and what is awaiting you is more intense and harmful," he said. | |
Since late January 2015, AQAP has lost a number of high-profile figures in US drone strikes - including religious official Harith al-Nadhari, religious official Ibrahim al-Rubaish, and religious and military official Nasser al-Ansi, along with lower ranking figures. | |
The proximity and precision of these assassinations has given rise to rumours in jihadist circles that AQAP has been infiltrated by spies, BBC Monitoring reports. |