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Yemen arrests 2 French Al Qaeda suspects — top official
By AFP - Jan 17,2015 - Last updated at Jan 17,2015
SANAA — Yemen has detained two Frenchmen for questioning over suspected links to Al Qaeda, a top security official said Saturday.
"During the past two days, two French nationals accused of belonging to Al Qaeda have been arrested," said national security service chief, General Mohammed Al Ahmadi.
Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) claimed responsibility for a January 7 assault on French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo in which two Frenchmen killed 12 people.
The perpetrators, brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi, are known to have trained with Al Qaeda in Yemen, which was formed in 2009 after a merger between militants there and Saudi Arabia.
"There are around 1,000 Al Qaeda militants in Yemen from 11 Arab and non-Arab countries," Ahmadi told reporters in Sanaa.
Washington regards the Yemen-based franchise as the network's most dangerous branch and has carried out a sustained drone war against its leaders.
AQAP said the orders to carry out last week's attack had come from the very top of the global jihadist network — Ayman Al Zawahiri, the Egyptian doctor who succeeded Al Qaeda founder Osama Bin Laden after his death in 2011.
Cherif Kouachi told French media before he was killed by police that a trip he made to Yemen the same year was financed by Anwar Al Awlak, a US-Yemeni cleric killed by a US drone strike in 2011.
AQAP has a record of launching attacks far from its base, including a bid to blow up a US airliner over Michigan on Christmas Day in 2009.
It recently called on its supporters to carry out attacks in France, which is part of a US-led coalition conducting air strikes against jihadists from the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria.
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Both brothers who carried out the attack against satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo travelled to Yemen via Oman in 2011 and had weapons training in the deserts of Marib, an Al Qaeda stronghold, two senior Yemeni sources said on Sunday.