UK says it, US agree to fund Yemen police unit

LONDON (Reuters) – The United States and Britain have  agreed to fund a counter-terrorism police unit in Yemen as part  of stepped-up efforts to fight terrorism in Yemen and Somalia  after an attack on a US-bound plane, Britain said today.

Civil war and lawlessness have turned Yemen, the Arab  world’s poorest state, into a base for al Qaeda, US officials  say, while the al Qaeda-inspired militant group al Shabaab has  taken control of large areas of south and central Somalia.

The United States and Britain agreed to intensify joint work  to tackle the “emerging terrorist threat” from both countries,  British Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s office said.

“Amongst the initiatives the prime minister has agreed with  President (Barack) Obama is US-UK funding for a special  counter-terrorism police unit in Yemen,” it said in a statement.

A spokeswoman for Brown could not say how much funding had  been agreed.

Britain and the United States will also cooperate in  supporting the Yemeni coast guard, Brown’s office said.

International attention has focused on Yemen after the  failed Christmas Day airline bomb attack.

Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, a 23-year-old Nigerian who told  US investigators he was trained by al Qaeda in Yemen, is  accused of trying to blow up a US passenger jet as it  approached Detroit.

Brown and Obama agreed that a larger peacekeeping force was  required in Somalia and they will support this at the United  Nations Security Council, Brown’s office said.

The Somali government and African Union (AU) have pleaded  with the United Nations to send a robust peacekeeping force that  could take over from the 5,200 AU troops from Uganda and Burundi  who have said they are incapable of stabilising Somalia.

Obama said on Friday he had made it a priority to strengthen  the US partnership with the Yemeni government, “training and  equipping their security forces, sharing intelligence and  working with them to strike al Qaeda terrorists.”

Brown has ordered a review of British airport security and  has invited key international partners to a London meeting on  Jan. 28 to discuss how to combat radicalisation in Yemen. Yemen’s Foreign Minister Abubakr al-Qirbi has said there  could be up to 300 al Qaeda militants in his country, some of  whom may be planning attacks on Western targets. Qirbi appealed  for more help from other countries to combat terrorism. Brown wants European Union foreign ministers to discuss  Yemen and Somalia at their next meeting in late January and he  will also discuss the situation in the two countries with other  EU leaders at the next European summit, his office said.

He intends to push for stronger action on Yemen from the  Financial Action Task Force, an international body that combats  money laundering and financing of terrorism, it said.

Brown has also called a special meeting of a British cabinet  committee on national security to discuss Britain’s response to  the attempted Detroit attack, the statement said.