The National - News

Terror amid Yemen’s power void

Al Qaeda’s recent attack on a defence ministry complex which killed at least 50 people, underscore­s how the group has gained from the nation’s political instabilit­y

- Youssef Hamza Foreign Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

SANAA // The nine Al Qaeda militants who stormed the defence ministry complex in Yemen’s capital two months ago carried raisins, almonds and dates for sustenance. They wore army uniforms with tracksuits underneath to fend off the cold and each carried nine magazines for their assault rifles and a large supply of grenades in shoulder bags.

Nineteen hours after the December 5 attack began, they were all dead. Security forces examined their bodies and discovered the militants had effectivel­y administer­ed first aid to one other amid the heat of battle.

Nearly a decade after the world was first introduced to Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), the formal name of the terror network’s branch in Yemen, the group continues to strike with near impunity. At least 50 people were killed in the assault on the defence ministry in central Sanaa.

That underscore­d how the group has benefited from the power vacuum in Yemen as the impoverish­ed country takes small steps towards democracy after 33 years of autocratic rule under by the now-ousted Ali Abdullah Saleh.

With help from the United States, the post- Saleh government has tried to neutralise AQAP through drone strikes and an all-out military offensive in the south of the country in 2012 that killed and wounded hundreds of militants.

Yet Al Qaeda remains a threat in Yemen and estimates on the number of its operatives in the country vary between 2,000 and 3,000 full- time members, including at least 300 Saudi nationals, according to a government official and activists who monitor the group’s affairs.

The militants have exploited the power struggle between Mr Saleh, who was removed in 2012 after a popular uprising, and his succes- sor, Abdrabu Mansur Hadi, Yemen’s interim president.

Factions loyal to the two men are in a power- sharing government that took office as part of an agreement sponsored by Arabian Gulf states in 2012 to end Yemen’s political crisis.

Yemeni officials claim there is evidence that Mr Saleh is using his extensive contacts among tribal chiefs, along with loyalists in Yemen’s security agencies and military, to undermine efforts to reform the army and police and embarrass Mr Hadi.

US officials — who together with Jordan are leading the reform programme for the military and police — have warned Mr Saleh against trying to obstruct reform or the transition to democracy.

But parliament­ary and presidenti­al elections, which were scheduled for this month , have been postponed because of con- tinuing instabilit­y in the country. Mr Hadi’s government faces a series of challenges, as Saleh loyalists have retained much of their power. AQAP captured vast quantities of weapons from the army when they captured territory in the south of Yemen in 2011. The group has assassinat­ed a number of security officers and often kidnaps westerners and demand ransoms as a means to

Al Qaeda is said to have 2,000 to 3,000 full-time members in Yemen

raise funds. Meanwhile, southern demands for autonomy have also prompted a change in Yemen’s political structure that would divide the country into a federation of six regions in the future.

US drone strikes, which are approved by Mr Hadi’s government and usually target militants in southern and eastern regions, have often stoked anti-government and anti-US sentiments.

The feelings are mostly a consequenc­e of the civilian casualties, but also because of the fear and anxiety caused by days of overflight­s by low-flying drones that, in some cases, precede strikes.

The drone strikes have had a dual effect on Yemen, however.

In some cases they have led to growing sympathy with the militants, but in others they have prompted tribal chiefs to ask the militants to leave and spare residents the strikes.

As Yemen struggles through the turmoil, Al Qaeda appears to have captured the hearts and minds of many Yemenis in areas beyond the control of the central government or regional administra­tions.

In some areas in the east and south, Al Qaeda leaders have reduced crime, punished thieves and detained murderers on the run, rights activists say.

They also settled disputes between residents and took widows as wives, deeds that endeared the militants to residents already frustrated by a government that offers little or no security or services.

The government’s lack of security measures was demonstrat­ed by the attack on the defence ministry compound in December in which dozens were killed, including nurses, doctors and one of Mr Hadi’s relatives.

 ?? Yahya Arhab / EPA ?? Yemeni soldiers stand guard in a street in Sanaa. The authoritie­s have imposed strict security measures as Yemen is facing an ongoing insurgency by Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and factional power struggles. AQAP is viewed as among the...
Yahya Arhab / EPA Yemeni soldiers stand guard in a street in Sanaa. The authoritie­s have imposed strict security measures as Yemen is facing an ongoing insurgency by Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and factional power struggles. AQAP is viewed as among the...

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