Sunday, 24 June 2012
SANAA (Reuters) - A road linking Yemen's capital to an oil-producing
province was opened for the first time in more than a year on Sunday, after the
army and tribal fighters agreed to withdraw from positions along the route,
military officials said.
Yemen's Republican Guard had skirmished with tribal groups in the area,
blocking deliveries of gas and other products from Maarib to the capital.
Both sides agreed to pull out after negotiations, said an official from
Yemen's military committee - a body set up to separate belligerent factions of
Yemen's army and tribal fighters following months of unrest in the impoverished
country.
The tribal groups backed an uprising which started last year and
eventually ousted Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh. The Republican Guard is
led by Saleh's son.
Their clashes have added to the insecurity in a country which has also
seen repeated bombings of the Maarib oil pipeline, which feeds Yemen's main oil
refinery and remains inoperative.
Saleh gave way to his deputy, Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, in February under
the terms of a power transfer deal brokered by Saudi Arabia and endorsed by
Washington, both alarmed by the rise of al Qaeda-linked Islamists in Yemen amid
the political upheaval.
Washington, which wants Hadi to unify the military and turn it against
al Qaeda, backed a military offensive against Islamist strongholds in southern
Yemen that began last month.
The military says it has driven Islamist fighters from towns the
militants seized in early 2011. Yemen's al Qaeda branch claimed responsibility
for the killing of the top military commander in the region last week.
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