Almotamar Net - Mohammed Ateeq al-Aufi al-Harbi, an al-Qaeda leader who was earlier handed over to Saudis after he handed himself in to Yemeni authorities, has said that al-Qaeda in Yemen has links to Iranian intelligence services and Houthi rebels in Saada.

Saturday, 28-March-2009
Almotamar.net, Saba - Mohammed Ateeq al-Aufi al-Harbi, an al-Qaeda leader who was earlier handed over to Saudis after he handed himself in to Yemeni authorities, has said that al-Qaeda in Yemen has links to Iranian intelligence services and Houthi rebels in Saada.

In his confessions aired by the Alarabiya channel, al-Aufi said al-Qaeda affiliates in Yemen are run by intelligence apparatuses of capable governments which administer them in the name of Mujahedeen targeting Yemen and Saudi Arabia.

�We receive money from these governments through Mujahedeen," he said, adding Houthis came to us once and offered us money and logistic support and then I, in my capacity as a filed commander of al-Qaeda in Yemen, started to understand that our group is administered by countries, but not youth as we learnt.

We realized there was a delusive administration for us, he went on.

He revealed al-Qaeda new plans to attack foreign targets and oil facilities in Yemen and the kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

"Al-Qaeda in Yemen became stronger after we, Saudi al-Qaeda branches, came to the country and merged with those colleagues in Yemen," he said.

"Al-Qaeda in Yemen was not effective but when Saudi al-Qaeda members arrived in the country a real al-Qaeda network started to take shape, he added.

After the merge, we formed a shoura council and named a leader, a deputy leader, and a military and media officer."

I led about 250 followers that were organized in military brigades operating according to war plans.

Al-Qaeda in Yemen, which was said recently to have taken shape by the merge of members in Yemen and the kingdom under the name of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula with a new leadership declared, chose Nasser al-Wuhaishi as leader and started to implement their strategy disseminating misinformation and carrying out terrorist attacks in the two countries.

They take advantage of strategic mountainous locations at which new members can join the group to fight as gorillas.

Among his confessions, al-Aufi said his surrender came after he differed with the new leadership over expiatory fatwas against people and countries, urging the rest members to come back to the right path and give themselves up to authorities.

On February 17, Yemen extradited al-Aufi to Saudi authorities, twenty days after he had surrendered to Yemeni authorities in Shabwa province.

Earlier, al-Qaeda announced a new leadership for its branches in the Arabian Peninsula.

Yemen and Saudi Arabia in 2003 inked an extradition deal and vowed to boost coordination and security cooperation to defeat al-Qaeda targeting the two neighbor countries.

Saba
This story was printed at: Monday, 29-April-2024 Time: 10:14 AM
Original story link: http://www.almotamar.net/en/6063.htm