Yemen’s parliament on Sunday passed a law banning drone strikes, Saba news agency said, days after one such attack reportedly hit a wedding motorcade and killed civilians.
“Lawmakers have voted to ban drone strikes in Yemen,” Saba reported after a parliamentary meeting.
The US military operates all unmanned aircraft flying over Yemen in support of Sana’a’s campaign against al-Qaeda, and has killed dozens of militants in an intensified campaign this year.
Photo: AFP
Saba said lawmakers on Sunday stressed “the importance of protecting all citizens from any aggression” and “the importance of preserving the sovereignty of Yemeni air space.”
On Thursday last week a drone attack in Rada killed 17 people, mostly civilians, in a wedding motorcade, triggering protests in the Arabian Peninsula country.
The Yemeni Supreme Security Committee, headed by Yemeni President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi, issued a statement on Friday last week insisting that the strike had targeted a car belonging to a leader of al-Qaeda.
In the car “were top leaders who plotted several terrorist attacks against the armed forces, police, civilians and vital government installations,” it said.
The statement did not give a death toll for the strike, nor refer to any civilian casualties or acknowledge that the attack was launched by a US drone.
Security sources and witnesses said two missiles were fired, and that mostly civilians had died.
Amnesty International said confusion over who was behind the raid “exposes a serious lack of accountability for scores of civilian deaths in the country.”
“Even if it turns out that this was a case of killing based on mistaken identity or dodgy intelligence, whoever was responsible needs to own up to the error and come clean about what happened in this incident,” Amnesty’s Middle East and North Africa director Philip Luther said.
Relatives of the dead staged protests to denounce the killings and demanded an official apology, as well as compensation.
Hundreds of people also blocked the road between Rada and Sana’a at Friday’s funeral of 13 people, but the road reopened a day later after reaching agreement on compensation with local military authorities.
“If the government fails to stop American planes from ... bombing the people of Yemen, then it has no rule over us,” tribal chief Ahmad al-Salmani told reporters on Saturday.
Two of the dead whose names were released — Saleh al-Tays and Abdullah al-Tays — had figured in the past on Yemeni government lists of wanted al-Qaeda suspects.
Yet most of those killed were civilians of the al-Tays and al-Ameri — which are part of the large and heavily armed Qayfah tribe.
Yemen is the ancestral home of Osama bin Laden and the home base of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, which the US views as the global jihadist network’s most dangerous franchise.
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