Six charged over USS Cole bombing

AFP, Sanaa
Suspects accused of carrying out the October 2000 attack against US destroyer Cole in Aden port are seen during a hearing session at the state security court in Sanaa yesterday. PHOTO: AFP
A Yemeni court yesterday charged six militants with carrying out the October 2000 bombing of the US destroyer Cole in Aden port and of membership in the Al-Qaeda terror network, an AFP correspondent reported.

The six included the main suspect in the case, Abdel Rahim al-Nashiri, who is in US custody and being tried in absentia. The five others were in court.

The attack against the US navy destroyer left 17 American sailors dead and was claimed by Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden.

The six were accused of carrying out "the attack against the USS Cole, belonging to the Al-Qaeda network and undermining Yemen's interests," according to the charge sheet read out during an hour-long hearing.

They were also accused of "forming an armed group to perpetrate criminal acts."

Three officials from the US Justice Department attended part of Wednesday's session at the state security court.

The court, which opened the trial on June 6 and adjourned for a month, set the next session for July 14.

Nashiri was arrested in the United Arab Emirates in October 2002 and handed over to Washington.

Nashiri, born in Saudi Arabia of Yemeni descent, was described at the time as Al-Qaeda's chief for naval operations and its operations chief in the Gulf.

He is also suspected of involvement in attacks against the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in August 1998 which killed 224 people, and in the October 2002 attack on the French supertanker Limburg off southern Yemen, in which one Bulgarian crew member was killed and 12 others were wounded.

The five others charged Wednesday are Yemenis.