June 23, 2012
By Fawaz al-Haidari (AFP)
ADEN — Yemeni troops took control on Saturday of the southeastern town
of Azzan, a known Al-Qaeda bastion, after the group's fighters left it a week
ago, an official said.
Thirty-five people, meanwhile, were killed in the southern Abyan
province over the past 10 days in explosions from landmines laid by Al-Qaeda
fighters before they fled from the province, officials said.
"Some 60 vehicles of army and security forces have been deployed
across central Azzan," a local government official told AFP on condition
of anonymity, adding that army warplanes were seen flying over the area.
Witnesses confirmed that Azzan, in the southeastern Shabwa province, was
finally handed over to the army by a committee of tribal mediators to whom
Al-Qaeda fighters had initially passed over control.
State news agency Saba said troops backed by armed militiamen had
"claimed a final victory over the Al-Qaeda terrorist network, spreading
state control to the city and overthrowing what was named the (Islamic) emirate
of Azzan."
On June 17, Al-Qaeda militants fled from Azzan, the last town in Yemen
where they had established total control.
Al-Qaeda had declared an Islamic emirate in the desert town where
hundreds of fighters were believed to have sought refuge after fleeing their strongholds
in nearby Abyan province.
President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi, quoted by Saba, hailed "the big
victory over Al-Qaeda elements of evil and terrorism" and urged Yemenis
"to join ranks in the face of terrorism and its elements and to confront
their criminal plots."
Taking advantage of a weakening central government control by an Arab
Spring-inspired uprising last year, the militants had overrun most of Abyan,
capturing Zinjibar, Jaar, Shuqra and several other villages.
But on May 12, Yemen's military launched an all-out offensive to
recapture the province. The army and local militiamen have succeeded in taking
over all of Abyan's towns except for Mahfad where jihadists still have a strong
presence.
Landmines which the jihadists laid in Abyan before fleeing have in the
past 10 days killed 27 people in the provincial capital Zinjibar and eight more
on the outskirts of the town of Jaar, officials said on Saturday.
"Landmine explosions in Zinjibar have left 27 people dead"
since the army, backed by local militiamen, drove out Al-Qaeda militants from
the capital on June 13, said Zinjibar deputy mayor Ghassan Sheikh.
He said the army has so far been unable to clear all the landmines,
adding that the explosives were sown in most streets of Zinjibar.
"Most of Zinjibar's residents have been unable to return yet"
from the main southern city of Aden to their town which has been totally
destroyed by the fighting, he said.
On Friday, the new army commander for southern Yemen, Major-General
Naser al-Taheri who replaced General Salem Ali Qoton, assassinated by an
Al-Qaeda suicide bomber last Monday, vowed to keep up the fight.
Qoton's murder will only "make us more determined... to hunt these
terrorist groups in their hideouts until the nation is cleansed from their
evil," Saba quoted him as saying.
Qoton, who had led the five-week-long offensive against the jihadists,
was killed along with two of his aides when a Somali suicide bomber threw
himself on their vehicle in the regional capital Aden.
US officials have repeatedly described the Yemen-based Al-Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula as the most dangerous of the jihadist network's worldwide
affiliates.