Monday, November 14, 2011

UN envoy: Yemen president should transfer power

November 14, 2011

SANAA, Yemen (AP) — A U.N. envoy is calling on Yemen's embattled president to speed up reforms and begin a transfer of power according to a plan backed by the international community, including the U.N. Security Council.

Jamal Benomar is in Yemen for a weeklong visit intended to promote the Gulf-backed proposal. It calls on President Ali Abdullah Saleh to transfer power to his vice president in exchange for immunity from prosecution. Saleh has not signed the proposal, despite nearly nine months of protests against his 30-year rule.

Benomar held meetings with opposition figures on Monday, including Maj. Gen. Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar, who leads a military unit of defectors siding with the opposition and protecting protesters.

Earlier in his trip, Benomar met with Saleh and his deputy.

French Aid Workers Released in Yemen

Associated Press

November 14, 2011

PARIS—Three French aid workers held hostage by al Qaeda militants in Yemen have been freed after nearly six months in captivity, thanks to help from the sultan of Oman and a possible ransom payment, officials said Monday.

Kidnappers linked to al Qaeda's offshoot in the region had demanded $12 million in exchange for the three and had threatened to kill the hostages if ransom wasn't paid imminently, Yemeni officials said.

The hostage ordeal came amid an uprising against the 30-year reign of President Ali Abdullah Saleh that has unraveled security in Yemen, the Arab world's poorest country. Al Qaeda-linked militants have taken control of entire towns in the country's restive south.

The aid group Triangle Generation Humanitaire said the three workers were in good health. But the circumstances of their release remained murky.

A senior Yemeni tribal mediator said the Omani government and a Yemeni businessman paid a ransom, though he gave no figure and the ransom couldn't immediately be confirmed.

The mediator said Oman and Yemeni tribesmen negotiated the release, and that the hostages were handed over to mediators one by one. He said a helicopter carried the hostages from the southern Yemeni city of Shabwa, a hotbed of Islamic militants, to Oman late Sunday.

The mediator spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak to the media. He didn't give further details.

Authorities in Oman didn't comment on the release or its government's role. The state-run Oman News Agency quoted a Foreign Ministry official as saying that Oman helped find the hostages because of its "distinguished relations" with France. The report didn't mention a ransom, saying only that Sultan Qaboos Bin Said ordered Oman authorities to provide "all facilities" to help find the hostages.

French Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero, whose government has cultivated ties with countries in the Gulf region, said Monday: "You know France's position. We do not pay ransom."

President Nicolas Sarkozy's office issued a statement announcing the release early Monday, saying the president "warmly thanks the sultan of Oman and the Oman authorities for their decisive help, as well as all those who contributed to this happy outcome." It didn't elaborate.

The two women and one man from Triangle Generation Humanitaire were abducted May 28 in eastern Yemen's Hadramawt province, which is home to al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

"We know they are in good physical shape," a director of the group, Patrick Verbruggen, told The Associated Press. "We are sharing a moment of happiness."

He said he had no details about how they were released, whether a ransom was paid, or when they would return to France.

The aid group, based in Lyon, France, pulled out its expatriate employees from Yemen after the kidnapping, though Yemeni employees remain. The group works on projects to improve water supplies and farming infrastructure.

Abdu al-Janadi, a Yemeni government spokesman, told reporters Sunday the hostages were held by al Qaeda militants in Shabwa and that the abductors threatened to kill the hostages if the Yemeni government didn't pay a ransom by the end of the week.

Kidnappings are common in Yemen, where tribesmen use abductions to try to force concessions from the government, such as the release of fellow tribesmen in prison.

Yemeni government forces and allied tribesmen killed 10 militants in attacks around the country Sunday, security officials said. A visiting U.N. envoy met with Mr. Saleh to push for a solution to the country's political crisis.