• DAWN.COM
  • DawnNews TV
  • ePaper
  • CityFM89
  • Events
  • Dawn Relief
  • Herald
  • Wednesday 16th May 2012 | Jumadi-ul-Awwal 12, 1433

Last updated: 41 days ago
Make DAWN Your Homepage
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Pakistan
  • World
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Sci-Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper
    • Multimedia
    • Blog
    • Forum
    • In-depth
    • Pakistan Profiles
    • Archives
Headlines:
No progress despite PML-N presence in PCNS meeting
Stocks weighed down by banks, rupee weakens
Pakistan wants meaningful dialogue with India: FO
Security Council backs April 10 deadline for Syria
Abducted Pakistani teen starved to death in Greece: police

Yemen charges US-born radical cleric al-Awlaki

DAWN.COM
3rd November, 2010

Yemeni policemen patrol outside the state security court in San'a,Yemen, Tuesday, Nov. 2, 2010. Yemen put a US-born radical cleric, Anwar al-Awlaki, on trial in absentia Tuesday, accusing him and two other men with plotting to kill foreigners and of being members of al-Qaida. The trial came as the country faces heavy pressure to crack down on the terror network following the interception of two mail bombs intercepted in Dubai and Britain last week. – Photo by AP

SAN’A: Faced with mounting US pressure to do more in the fight against al-Qaida after the thwarted mail bombs plot, Yemen on Tuesday took the surprise move of putting on trial a fugitive US-born radical Islamic cleric wanted for his part in terror attacks on American soil.

The move is largely symbolic, since Anwar al-Awlaki was being tried in absentia. But it appeared to be an attempt by Yemen’s government to show its American allies that it takes the cleric as a serious threat, something it has wavered on in the past.

Al-Awlaki, born in New Mexico to Yemeni parents, is one of the most prominent English-language radical clerics, and his sermons advocating jihad, or holy war, against the United States have influenced militants involved in several attacks or attempted attacks on US soil. Yemeni officials say he may have blessed the recent mail bomb plot, though not necessarily took an active part in it.

The Obama administration is considering its own terror charges against the 39-year-old al-Awlaki. But even without charges, it put him on a list of militants the CIA is authorized to capture or kill, after the Christmas attempt to bomb a US passenger jet by a young Nigerian whom al-Awlaki may have helped recruit for al-Qaida in Yemen.

Al-Awlaki is thought to be hiding in the mountains of Yemen, enjoying the protection of family and his large tribe, while facing what some analysts describe as only a half-hearted effort by the Yemeni authorities to capture or kill him.

Yemeni officials had until now privately insisted that they had no legal justification to detain him and that, if captured, the country’s constitution prevents his extradition to the United States because he is a Yemeni citizen.

The trial could signal at least a superficial shift in Yemen’s position brought about by US pressure following the interception Friday of two bombs hidden in packages mailed from Yemen and addressed to synagogues in the Chicago area.

The two packages were found on planes transiting through Dubai and Britain. US officials believe the plot is the work of al-Qaida’s branch in Yemen, of which al-Awlaki is a top figure.

Washington, which has dispatched a team to help with the investigation into the latest plot, has been frustrated with the limited scope of Yemen’s efforts to deal with al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, as the group here is called, despite US military aid that has been hiked up to $150 million this year. Yemeni forces have had multiple clashes with al-Qaida fighters this year, but with only ambiguous results, and most senior figures in the group remain at large.

Yemen’s president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, promised President Barack Obama in phone conversation that his government will ”continue its efforts in combating terrorism and pursue al-Qaida to crush its terrorist activities,” according to Yemen’s official news agency, Saba.

Analysts here believe that a combination of regime weakness and Saleh’s own political maneuvering have prevented him from launching a full-blown campaign to eliminate al-Qaida, which is believed to have some 300 core members in Yemen. Saleh has to balance among powerful tribes that control most areas outside the capital, as well as among Islamic hard-liners with whom he has allied himself to preserve power.

”The government can, if it wants to, capture al-Awlaki with the cooperation of his tribe, said Yemeni analyst Mansour Hayel. ”But it is taking its time, using the al-Qaida threat to milk the United States for more aid.”

Saleh’s government has tried recently to form tribal militias to aid its forces in fighting al-Qaida. Among those it has approached is the Awalik, a large and powerful tribe based in the mountainous province of Shabwa to which al-Awlaki belongs.

But in a sign of the dangerous nature of tribal politics, Awalik tribesmen belonging to al-Qaida issued a letter on militant websites Tuesday warning their tribe’s leaders of ”God’s punishment” if they help the regime, and urged them to join al-Qaida’s fight to overthrow Saleh’s regime.

The regime ”has pillaged the resources of our country and divvied them up with the Crusaders (Americans), leaving its people to complain of poverty and disease,” the letter said. ”No one allies with this regime except in hopes of gifts or out of fear of its oppression. You are too good to aspire for gifts and too noble to fear anyone but God.”

The letter suggests a split _ and such divisions can often lead to violence between tribal factions. But the threat and appeal to strong tribal loyalties could also make Awalik members more reluctant to work with the government.

The trial of al-Awlaki in a San’a court on Tuesday came as a surprise. Al-Awlaki’s name and that of a cousin, Ossam al-Awlaki, were added as defendants in absentia at the last minute in the trial of another man, Hisham Assem. Assem has been accused of killing a Frenchman in an Oct. 6 attack at an oil firm compound where he worked as a security guard. – AP

Advertismenet Advertismenet Advertismenet
Share
Read more: Al Qaida, radical cleric, Yemen, yemen parcel bomb
Print This Post Print This Post Email This Post Email This Post

Tweet

Related News

At least 29 killed in Yemen army, Qaeda clashes: officials Yemen urges Pakistan to free bin Laden’s widow Gunmen kill American teacher in Yemen Heavy shelling kills 16 Al-Qaeda fighters in Yemen Qaeda suspects kidnap Swiss woman: Yemeni officials

From This Section

No progress despite PML-N presence in PCNS meeting Turk PM says Iran insincere about nuclear talks venue Stocks weighed down by banks, rupee weakens Pakistan wants meaningful dialogue with India: FO Security Council backs April 10 deadline for Syria

MEDIA GALLERY

Pick Fresh: Hand picked produce in a van
Fight club for office workers
The Enchanting World of Tassaduq Sohail
Understanding “Autism”
The globe in snapshots
Debt village’s cannabis plan
9/11: What it means to us
Eid greetings – The conventional way
The melancholy behind a strong call for Sehri
Working hard for a festive mood

Domestic success to end international hiatus?
  • Domestic success to end international hiatus?
  • SERVICES

    • TV Guide
    • Alert
    • Prayers Timing
    • Stock
    • Forex and Gold
    • Weather

    DAWN MEDIA GROUP

    • DawnNews TV
    • ePaper
    • City FM89
    • Spider
    • Herald
    • Events

    DAWN MEDIA

    • Contact Us
    • Feedback
    • Reproduction & Copyrights
    • Contribution Guidelines
    • Sitemap
    • FAQ

    ADVERTISE WITH US

    • DAWN Classified
    • Book an Ad Online
    • Advertise with DAWN.COM

    FOLLOW US

    • Mobile version
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
    • RSS Feed
    Privacy Policy Terms and Conditions
    Copyright © 2012 DAWN.COM

    In Firefox:

    1. In the TOOLS menu, select OPTIONS.
    2. At the top of the dialog box, select the GENERAL tab.
    3. In the HOME PAGE text box, type http://www.dawn.com, then click OK.

    In Chrome:

    1. Select the Chrome wrench icon at the top of your browser window. From the drop-down menu that appears, select OPTIONS.
    2. At the top of the dialog box, select the BASICS tab.
    3. In the HOME PAGE section, type http://www.dawn.com, in the OPEN THIS PAGE text box, then click CLOSE.

    In Safari:

    1. Select the Safari gear icon at the top of your browser window.
    2. From the drop-down menu that appears, select PREFERENCES.
    3. At the top of the dialog box, select the GENERAL tab.
    4. In the HOME PAGE section, type http://www.dawn.com, then click the red "close" button.