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To: Straight Vermonter
Yemen clashes kill 36 soldiers and Shi'ite rebels

SANAA, April 2 (Reuters) - Yemeni army tanks and helicopters pounded Shi'ite rebel strongholds in the north on Saturday, killing at least 36 people, officials and rebel sources said.

Fighting broke out late on Friday in the northern area of Nishour after rebels tried to attack an army camp. Ten soldiers and six rebels died in the battle, an official said.

Clashes spread close to Saada province on Saturday, killing at least 20 rebels, rebel sources said.

It was the latest in a series of clashes between government forces and rebel followers of slain Shi'ite Muslim cleric Hussein al-Houthi. Local sources said the government was using tribal leaders to mediate a rebel surrender.

Houthi, a Zaidi Shi'ite Muslim who founded a radical group called Believing Youth, was killed last September after two months of clashes with security forces in which at least 200 rebels and state troops died.

Yemeni security sources have blamed Houthi's father, Sheikh Badr el-Deen, for the new round of violence which has killed dozens of government soldiers and rebels since erupting in late March in Saada and surrounding areas of Nishour, al-Shafaah and al-Rizamat.

Yemen says Houthi's armed group is allied to Iran and is trying to overthrow the government, install a Shi'ite religious rule, and is preaching violence against the United States and Israel at mosques. The group is not linked to al Qaeda.

Authorities have detained around 800 suspected followers and have closed many religious schools run by Houthi's followers, saying they were illegal.

Sunni Muslims make up most of Yemen's 19 million population, while Shi'ite Muslims, which include the Zaidi sect to which President Ali Abdullah Saleh belongs, compose about 15 percent.

Yemen has joined the U.S.-led war on terrorism since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. It has cracked down on al Qaeda-linked militants following attacks at home, including the 2000 USS Cole bombing and the 2002 attack on the French supertanker Limburg.
10 posted on 04/02/2005 4:55:20 AM PST by Straight Vermonter (Liberalism: The irrational fear of self reliance.)
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To: Straight Vermonter

American captured in Iraq said to be key Zarqawi aide (More info on this guy)



Associated Press

The U.S. military in Iraq is holding a man it says is the first American captured fighting for the Iraqi insurgency. Pentagon officials describe the man, who holds U.S. and Jordanian citizenship, as a senior associate of al-Qaeda ally Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

The American was captured in a raid at his home in Iraq in late 2004, Matthew Waxman, the Pentagon's deputy assistant secretary of defense for detainee affairs, said in an interview Thursday.

Officials declined to provide his name, hometown, or identify him other than to say he functioned as Zarqawi's emissary to insurgent groups in several cities in Iraq.

Zarqawi, who has declared his allegiance to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda network, is the most wanted man in Iraq and is tied to numerous bombings and kidnappings since the U.S.-led invasion removed Saddam Hussein from power two years ago.

Defense officials also say the captured American helped coordinate the movement of insurgents and money into Iraq, and provided support for kidnappings carried out by Zarqawi's operatives, Waxman said.

"Weapons and bomb-making materials were in his residence at the time he was captured," Waxman said. Several other insurgents were captured in the raid, conducted by U.S.-led coalition forces.

After his capture, a panel of three U.S. officers determined he was an enemy combatant and not entitled to prisoner-of-war status under the Geneva Convention, Waxman said.

The man is still being held as a security threat but has been visited by representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross.

His capture represents a complicated legal issue for the military, and it is uncertain whether he will be turned over to the Justice Department for investigation or to Iraq's new legal system, which has handled the prosecution of other foreign fighters who came to Iraq to fight the U.S.-led occupation and new Iraqi government.

Waxman said officials were considering how to proceed with his case.

11 posted on 04/02/2005 5:02:11 AM PST by Straight Vermonter (Liberalism: The irrational fear of self reliance.)
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