Summary: At least 25 suspects with links to al-Qaeda have been
arrested in connection with the deadly attack on the U.S. Embassy in the
Yemeni capital, a senior security official said Thursday.
At least 25 suspects with links to al-Qaeda have been arrested in
connection with the deadly attack on the U.S. Embassy in the Yemeni
capital, a senior security official said Thursday. The attack Wednesday
killed 16 people, including a young American woman.
According to the AP, the Yemeni official said the 25 were detained
from various parts of Yemen over the past 24 hours and were being
questioned by Yemeni and U.S. investigators. The official said an
American team, possibly from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, was on
its way to Yemen to take charge of the investigation.
In Washington, the State Department issued a travel warning, asking
U.S. citizens to "defer nonessential travel" to Yemen. The
U.S. also authorized the departure of the non-emergency embassy
personnel.
Susan Elbaneh, 18, a U.S. citizen from Lackawanna, N.Y., who was
recently wed in Yemen in an arranged marriage, was killed along with her
Yemeni husband as they stood outside the embassy, family members said
Wednesday. They were apparently there to do paperwork for the
husband's move to the U.S. when the attackers struck, said
Elbaneh's brother, Ahmed. The State Department confirmed the deaths
Thursday.
President Bush called the attack "a reminder that we are at
war with extremists who will murder innocent people to achieve their
ideological objectives."
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