Armed forces abandon east Yemen

Local officials fear that the abandonment of the eastern province of Hadramawt will be an opportunity for Al-Qaeda to expand.

Armed forces abandon east Yemen

World Bulletin / News Desk

The capture of much of eastern Yemen's oil-producing province by a newly-formed group of armed tribesmen and  clerics has alarmed local officials, who say they fear the situation will be exploited by al Qaeda to expand.

The Arabian peninsula's poorest country is now divided between a Saudi-backed exiled government and Iran-backed  fighters who control the capital.

The country is also home to one of the most lethal branches of al Qaeda, sheltering in tribal regions and targeted for years by U.S. drone strikes.

In recent days, troops appear to have abandoned much of the eastern province of Hadramawt. Armed tribesmen took charge of an airport and an oil facility in the province's seaside capital Mukalla on Thursday.

"They have designated local youth from the area to set up checkpoints near the area of the oil fields and export terminal and near the Al-Rayyan airport," said a local official. "The security situation there and in Mukalla is now under control and calm."

Local politicians say the Council, now effectively the de facto ruling authority in the province, is separate from al Qaeda but includes some figures associated with al Qaeda in the past.

It negotiated with al Qaeda gunmen who appeared on the streets of Mukalla two weeks ago, and since then appears to have reached some kind of accommodation with them, although the nature of that relationship appears ambiguous.

An official in the province told Reuters: "A local committee (of tribesmen) was formed to administer Hadramawt, and this committee benefits al Qaeda."

Nasser Ba Quzquz, a left-wing politician in the provincial capital, said a new feeling of local solidarity should not extend to al Qaeda.

"Yes, these people are sons of Hadramawt, but they belong to a terrorist organisation. They kill people from Hadramawt, they rob banks and sow terror and fear."

 HIT LIST

Residents of Mukalla and other towns say al Qaeda fighters have become brazen in recent weeks, openly recruiting at rallies. During one gathering, one person named top political and security officers on a hit list.

The fighters' boldness may be one reason army units were so quick to abandon the province.

"Military units along the Hadramawt coast handed over their bases to tribesmen and returned to their home provinces out of fear that they would be attacked by al Qaeda," said a local army official.

Al Qaeda fighters in the area are drawn mostly from local tribes, who appear in some cases either to bless or at least not oppose the participation of their kin in the militant group.

Yemen's branch of the militant network, known as al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), has carried out years of bomb and gun attacks on the state, plotted to blow up U.S.-bound airliners and claimed responsibility for the attack on the Charlie Hebdo magazine in Paris in January that killed 12.

It and other fighters have stepped up attacks since the Houthis seized the capital in September and expanded across the country. Over the past three weeks, an Arab coalition led by Saudi Arabia has been bombing the Houthis.

Worsening fighting has raised the prospect of a full-blown sectarian civil war, often al Qaeda's aim in Arab countries where it operates.

Al Qaeda has been trying to stir up support against both the Houthis and the weak Yemeni state in Hadramawt.

 

Güncelleme Tarihi: 17 Nisan 2015, 16:47
YORUM EKLE