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Evidence is still being gathered from the French oil tanker Limburg
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SANAA,
October 17 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Yemen admitted for the
first time Wednesday, October 16, that a “terrorist act” was behind
the October 6 explosion on a French supertanker off its coast in which a
Bulgarian sailor was killed.
“The
(inquiry) results, the evidence and the indications show that a
premeditated act of terrorism with a small boat loaded with explosives
was the cause,” Interior Minister Rashad al-Alimi said Wednesday,
cited by the official SABA news agency.
French
and U.S. investigators already said last week the blast on the Limburg
was due to an attack, and Yemeni authorities started to agree but only
after initially saying it was probably caused by an accident.
“Security
services have arrested several suspect individuals to question them ...
and the investigation will continue to collect information concerning
this act of terrorism,” Alimi said.
The
minister said Yemeni authorities arrived at the conclusion after a
series of “inquiries and investigations conducted (by Sanaa) in
cooperation with the teams of American and French investigators.”
Yemeni
security services have identified a “house suspected of having been
used to build the (small) boat” located of the port city of
Al-Mukalla, capital of the Hadramaut province, Alimi said.
“Traces
of explosives were found in the samples (of debris found) aboard the
tanker,” he added, vowing that the investigation would continue until
authorities had arrested “all those implicated in this act of
terrorism and those who ordered it.”
Already
struggling to improve an increasingly tarnished security image, Yemen
had initially roundly denied the explosion was terrorism, despite the
conclusions of the U.S. and French teams to the contrary.
Alimi
said the Limburg attack had “undermined the reputation of Yemen and
its economic interests and provoked a (oil) pollution catastrophe which
is threatening the marine environment.”
U.S.
and French investigators had said they found pieces of a fiberglass boat
believed to have been used in the attack and traces of TNT. But the
Yemenis then insisted they wanted to analyze the evidence for
themselves.
The
tanker’s captain and some of its crew said they saw a small boat
racing toward their ship seconds before the explosion.
No
human remains have been found by divers at the scene of the blast. The
body of the Bulgarian, who reportedly drowned after jumping into the
waters, later washed up ashore.
Yemeni
Prime Minister Abdel Kader Bajamal was to update French officials on the
probe during a visit to Paris Wednesday.
His
trip coincided with the publication of a statement on an Arabic website
that claimed to be from the Al-Qaeda network which said: “The
operation against this tanker is a message for France.”
French
Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie said Friday, October 11, that
information given so far strongly suggested that the tanker had been
targeted by a small boat laden with explosives, in the same manner as
the deadly attack against the U.S. destroyer Cole in the Yemeni port of
Aden almost exactly two years ago, on October 12, 2000.
The
Aden-Abyan Islamic Army, made up of a handful of extremist militants
including veterans from the Afghan war against the former Soviet Union,
has claimed responsibility for the new blast.
The
group, which is not known to have direct ties with Al-Qaeda, said its
actual target was a U.S. Navy frigate. But it said hitting the Limburg
was not a failure, since the supertanker was “going to supply the
(U.S.) Fifth Fleet for striking the brothers in Iraq.”
Yemeni
authorities also said Wednesday that security had been increased around
all their ports.
Meanwhile,
despite the attack on the French tanker, French President Jacques
Chirac reiterated on Wednesday his country’s firm opposition to U.S.
attempts to win U.N. backing for the use of military force against Iraq
and denied any link between Baghdad and Al-Qaeda.
France
is determined to see the council adopt a two-step approach to the Iraqi
crisis as opposed to Washington’s pursuit of a single resolution
threatening automatic use of military force if arms inspections are
blocked, AFP said.
In
an interview with the Future satellite channel and Radio Orient
before leaving for a Mideast tour, Chirac stressed that “France is
completely hostile” to giving the United States automatic
authorization to use force if Washington deemed that Iraq was not fully
permitting the inspections.
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