Monday, 27 October 2014

Houthis enter al-Qaeda stronghold in central Yemen

Houthi fighters backed by Yemeni government forces entered an al-Qaeda stronghold in central Yemen on Sunday, local tribesmen said, one day after Islamist fighters pushed their rivals back.
The Houthis moved into al-Manasseh area in al-Bayda province under cover from Katyusha rocket fire from the Yemeni army and presidential guard.
Tribal sources said the Ansar al-Sharia fighters withdrew to another district called Bakla, some 3 kilometers (two miles) away.
The Houthis have advanced into central and western Yemen since they seized control of Yemeni capital Sanaa on September 21, taking on tribesmen and al-Qaeda militants.
Fighting has flared up in several provinces, alarming neighbour Saudi Arabia, the world's No. 1 oil exporter.
The Yemeni army had so far avoided clashing with the Houthis or to support them in their advance on al-Qaeda strongholds. But President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi considers Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) as the main threat facing the country.
One tribal leader said the Houthis exploited old rivalries between two wings of one of the main tribes in the area, the Al al-Dhahab tribe, and managed to enter the area, which had long been the main stronghold of Ansar al-Sharia, the local wing of AQAP.
Houthi officials made no comment but group's television station said Houthi fighters and their allies have "reached the home of the leader of the criminal gangs" in al-Manasseh, referring to Ansar al-Sharia.
A US drone on Friday struck al Qaeda targets in al-Manasseh killing at least three people, tribal sources said.
Local sources said on Sunday that Abdel-Ra'ouf al-Dahab, the local leader of Ansar al-Sharia, and a number of Saudi members of the group were killed in the strike. Officials could not confirm the report.
Tribal sources on Saturday said that al-Qaeda militants and their tribal allies killed dozens of Houthi fighters in Radda and pushed back the rebels' advance on the town, where some 60,000 live.
They said al-Qaeda fighters surrounded the Houthis on a mountain in Radda at dawn and killed dozens of them and took 12 prisoners forcing them to retreat to Dhamar province although clashes continued in other parts of the city.
The northern-based Houthis established themselves as power brokers in Yemen last month by capturing Sanaa against scant resistance from the administration of Hadi, who appears not to have a full grip on the country's fractious military.
Houthis have managed to capture different strategic areas along the Red Sea coast in al-Hudaydah, including the civilian airport, the military airport and the main seaport.
The steady expansion of Houthis has angered al-Qaeda, which views Shia as heretics and Houthis as pawns of Iran.
There are fears that if Yemen falls apart, al-Qaeda militants will exploit it as a haven.
Al-Qaeda is active in several Yemeni provinces, mainly in the south and southeast, where repeated government military campaigns drove the network's militants out of key cities they once controlled.
Yemen has been dogged by political instability since an uprising forced dictator Ali Abdullah Saleh from power in 2012.
(Reuters, Al-Akhbar)
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