Saturday, June 25, 2011

Four injured in Taiz clashes

Sana'a, June 25, 2011- Two republican guards and two civilians were injured when clashes erupted between pro revolution militants and republican guards on Saturday.

Eyewitnesses said that the militants were occupying governmental buildings in Taiz city while republican guards tried to retake them. The buildings are still in the control of the militants.

The clashes continued for three hours.

The gunmen in the clashes belong to powerful tribal leader Hamood Mikhlafi, who vowed to control most governmental buildings in Taiz city to ensure that protesters are not attacked, especially after more than 60 protesters were killed by government forces in one night.

Source: Yemen Post

Kiwi journalist in Yemen prison

June 25, 2011

Source: ONE News

A Waikato couple are waiting for answers as their son is detained in Yemen.

Journalist Glen Johnson was picked after he apparently entered the troubled Middle Eastern country illegally.

A spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade in Wellington has confirmed Johnson has been arrested, and that staff in Saudi Arabia are working with the British Embassy in Yemen to provide assistance.

However, he says due to the current security situation in Yemen, providing help is proving to be a challenge.

Stuff said Johnson has covered the Middle East for papers including The New York Times and France's Le Monde, since moving there just over two years ago.

He was also beaten by security forces while covering uprisings in Egypt in February, they reported.

The 28-year old is originally from the small town of Piopio in the Waitomo district, where his parents, Mike and Lin Johnson, are waiting for news from officials.

Mike Johnson says as far as he knew his son had been contracted to do a story in Africa, so the fact he is in Yemen is a surprise.

He says his son is not "gung ho" and is relatively careful, but is passionate about the Middle East.

The last time Mike saw his son was just over two years ago when he left New Zealand.

Mike and Lin say they understand that their son was not being mistreated,

They will not be going to Yemen to look for their son saying "we know it wouldn't be productive".

MFAT lists Yemen as an extreme risk for travel and recommends Kiwis avoid the country.

Yemen blacklists 43 opponents for pipeline blasts

SANAA, June 24 (Reuters) - Yemen's Interior Ministry published the names of 43 members of the opposition it accuses of blowing up oil pipelines and attacks on power pylons, its news agency said on Friday.
The Ministry of Interior said members of the Joint Meeting Party coalition were behind the pipeline attacks in Maarib province and the attacks on pylons, causing a fuel crisis and power cuts, the Saba news agency said, listing the names on its website.
It quoted a source at the ministry as saying "the ministry has registered the names of those elements in the black list and circulates their names".
Months of protests by hundreds of thousands of Yemenis demanding that President Ali Abdullah Saleh step down after 33 years in power have taken their toll on the country's infrastructure and public services.
In March, tribe members opposed to Saleh attacked electricity pylons in the central Maarib province triggering power outages in parts of the capital Sanaa.
The same month, a blast on Yemen's main oil pipeline had stopped the flow of light Marib crude to the Aden refinery, bringing it to a halt and leading to country-wide fuel shortages.
The government had blamed the pipeline blast on tribesmen supporting opposition groups demanding Saleh's ousting. A senior official said Yemen had lost nearly $1 billion in revenues since the blast.
Earlier this month, the 150,000 barrels-per-day refinery received a 600,000-barrel shipment of crude from top oil exporter Saudi Arabia as part of a promised 3 million barrels.
The source quoted by Saba said the ministry would engage all security agencies, including the national security and the security departments of the governorates, to arrest them.
The source also said the ministry allocated a reward of 3 million Yemeni rials ($13,500) for those reporting a wanted person or provide information leading to the arrests.
The fate of Saleh, who is recovering from a surgery in Saudi Arabia after an attack on his palace on June 3, is at the centre of a political crisis that has paralysed Yemen and threatened to tip it into civil war.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Clash with Islamists looms in Yemen

By Noah Browning in Aden, FT

In the shadow of the volcano that overlooks the coastal metropolis of Aden in south Yemen, the once cosmopolitan district of Mualla is scarred with the signs of revolutionary upheaval.

Placards of Ali Abdullah Saleh, the president, have been wrenched from the triumphal archways that reminded southerners of the 1994 civil war that brought independent south Yemen under his rule.

But since Mr Saleh was stricken by an explosion at his palace and taken to Saudi Arabia for treatment this month, the shaky political order he represented has been in almost total collapse throughout the country.

Months of anti-government protests in the capital, Sana’a, gave way to bloody clashes, now in tense stalemate. In Aden, the “Hirak,” or southern secessionist movement, long seething at the region’s marginalisation under northern rule, has exploded into plain view.

Over-running government buildings, protesters have painted over the Yemeni tricolour with the blue chevron and red socialist star of the southern flag.

A funeral on Friday for a youth slain by security forces devolved into deadly skirmishes with southern activists. Most residents nervously seek shelter as the city verges on chaos.

Only the strewn concrete slabs and wrought-iron fences recall the battles just weeks earlier between demonstrators and security forces, both of whom have retreated to the outskirts.

Thousands of refugees from Abyan have fled cadres of Islamist militants who move ever closer from the east. Aden, where only a few security force members remain, teems with armed men and youths organised into neighbourhood watch gangs as residents wonder whether the divided military surrounding the city has the will or ability to repel the militants’ advance.

In makeshift shelters throughout the city’s slums, refugees describe scenes of horror as the self-styled “Defenders of Sharia” group was allowed to over-run their towns in the province of Abyan after a swift retreat by army forces.

“There was nonstop shooting everywhere and we were afraid even to look out the windows, our neighbourhoods were being shelled so heavily,” said Mariam Ibrahim.

She shifted her young grandson on her lap in a sweltering schoolhouse packed with more than 100 people from the town of Zinjibar, which fell to the militants.

US officials – convinced that the militants have ties to al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, though their true strength is generally unknown – have intensified drone attacks on suspected operatives to try to deprive them of the leeway afforded by the security vacuum.

“The army disappeared in a matter of hours, with no warning and left us to die at the hands of these groups and the Americans,” said Naif Muktha, another refugee. “The threat of al-Qaeda was manipulated by the regime now that it’s in danger and now we’re the victims of this conspiracy.”

Worry abounds among Adenis that army units stationed outside the city may suddenly withdraw, as they did in Zinjibar, and expose the rebelling populace to punishing combat with the Islamists.

“Southerners have suffered under socialist radicalism in previous decades and now history has turned and we are threatened by religious radicalism,” resident Muhammad Ba Kays noted.

Signs of a looming clash with the extremists are prominent, as graffiti announcing “Freedom for the South” has in many places been crossed out and replaced with “Yes, we want God’s sharia.”

Memories of Major General Ali Muhsin, once Mr Saleh’s top aide and now the chief defector in the army, capturing Aden in the 1994 civil war with the aid of thousands of allied “Mujahideen” and tribes by way of Abyan, still anger many in the area.

“All of these disasters – tribalism, extremism, radical religious schools – they have been imposed on us from the north,” said Qassem Askar, a senior secessionist leader, noting that Ali Muhsin may again be employing these groups for a strategic advantage in the national political crisis.

“Then and now, they seek only the destruction of our will to resist,” he continued, adding that he is still in pain from years of torture in a northern jail. The splintering of the military is especially pronounced around Aden, as some local commanders remain loyal to the president, while others support the revolutionary movement and many appear to be neutral.

In the sun-scorched wastes outside the city, among camel herds and gnarled palms, loyalist tanks heave into motion, their orders and destination shrouded in mystery.

However, local journalists said pro-government units were being positioned not in the east, to confront the militants, but rather in the mountainous west, as a bulwark against divisions aligned with Ali Muhsin on the Red Sea.

“It’s like Lebanon in the 1980s here,” noted activist Azal Omar al-Jawi. “The army leaders are like rival warlords, playing a big political game and treating the area like a strategic chessboard.”

The popular uprising in the south, like its counterpart in the north, stands precariously between a popular revolution and a bloodbath, imposed by traditional strongmen.

Yemeni Instability Emboldens Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula; Here’s How the U.S. Should Respond

June 24th, 2011 - by Frank Cilluffo

Today we released an issue brief on Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) that highlights the current threat that AQAP poses, the implications of AQAP’s ascension in the wake of the Yemeni government collapse and considers options to address the threat. We contend that the current security vacuum that AQAP has exploited to expand and secure its safe haven, also allows the U.S. greater flexibility of counterterrorism options and maneuverability, providing a unique opportunity to reduce AQAP’s capabilities through the use of special operations forces and armed drones.

Here’s a preview:

This week’s escape of 63 suspected al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) fighters from a Yemeni prison exemplifies how President Saleh’s departure to Saudi Arabia and Yemeni instability embolden this lethal al Qaeda affiliate. In recent weeks, the writ of government in Yemen has evaporated under the twin strains of the Houthi rebellion in northern Yemen and the Secessionist movement in southern Yemen. AQAP leaped into the security vacuum created by Yemen’s political volatility. As the Yemeni military consolidates its strength in an attempt to maintain state control and fight twin insurgencies, AQAP has further expanded its safe haven in the country’s interior, further increasing their operational capacity

AQAP’s ascension in the wake of the Yemeni government collapse again illustrates the dangers of un- and under-governed states as terrorist sanctuaries. As seen in Afghanistan, Somalia, Sudan, Pakistan, the Sahel and many other places, al Qaeda exploits underlying conditions in these safe havens to plan, train and execute global terrorist attacks. Thus the question becomes this: how does the U.S. counter AQAP amidst pending state failure in Yemen?

Surprisingly, Yemeni unrest provides U.S. counterterrorism efforts a unique opportunity to interdict and significantly reduce AQAP. AQAP’s proven capability and their intent to strike the U.S. homeland, those of our allies, and our interests in the region, coupled with Yemen’s shift from under- to un-governed territory and the collapsing of the Saleh regime all suggest that an immediate escalation in drone operations and targeted Special Operations Force missions could rapidly mitigate the threat posed by AQAP.

Suicide attack kills 3 Yemeni soldiers

ADEN, June 24 (Saba) – A suicide car bomb has exploded in Aden province, killing three Yemeni soldiers and wounding ten others, a security source said on Friday.

In a statement to Saba, the source said that a suicide attack killed three soldiers and wounded ten others as they were patrolling at a street in Aden in addition to the injuring of two people.

"The terrorist attack was carried out by a suicide", the source said, adding that investigations were underway to find out the identity of the suicide and those who stand behind this criminal act.