Dozens of Al Qaeda Militants Escape From Prison in Yemen
SANAA, Yemen -- Dozens of Al Qaeda  militants battled their way out of prison Wednesday in the latest sign  that Yemen's political upheaval has emboldened them to challenge  authorities in the country's nearly lawless south, security officials  said.
In a carefully choreographed escape from the  Mukalla prison in Hadramout province, 57 Al Qaeda-linked militants  attacked their guards and seized their weapons before they made their  way through a 45-yard tunnel to freedom.
Simultaneously, bands of gunmen opened fire at the prison from outside to divert the guards' attention, the officials said.
At least one guard was killed and another  wounded, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because  they were not authorized to speak to the media.
The 57 were among 62 inmates who escaped. It was not immediately clear whether the other six were also Islamic militants.
The officials said many of the inmates who  escaped belonged to a local Hadramout cell blamed for a series of  attacks on security forces in the last two years. Their leader, Hamza  al-Qehety, was believed to be among those who escaped on Wednesday.
The last major breakout by Al Qaeda  militants in Yemen took place in 2006, when 23 escaped a Sanaa detention  facility. Among them was Nasser al-Wahishi, who went on to become the  leader of Al Qaeda in Yemen, as well as Qassim al-Rimi, a dominant  figure in the group.
Al Qaeda's branch in Yemen has been linked  to several nearly successful attacks on U.S. targets, including the plot  to bomb a Detroit-bound airliner in December 2009. The group also put  sophisticated bombs into U.S.-addressed parcels that made it onto cargo  flights last year.
Al Qaeda-linked militants seized control  last month of two towns in Abyan, another southern province, and briefly  took control of several neighborhoods in the neighboring province of  Lahj last week.
Some of these militants belong to groups  that have been quietly tolerated by longtime ruler Ali Abdullah Saleh  and used to counter the weight of other extremists or against  secessionists in the mostly secular south of the country.
Yemen's political crisis began when  demonstrators inspired by successful uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia took  to the streets in early February to demand Saleh's ouster. The largely  peaceful movement gave way to heavy street fighting when tribal militias  took up arms in late May.
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 6/22/2011 10:07:00 AM
6/22/2011 10:07:00 AM
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