Members of the pro-government Popular Resistance militia inspect a car at a checkpoint on a road leading to Yemen’s southern province of Abyan yesterday.

AFP
Aden

Al Qaeda fighters drove pro-government forces out of a town in southern Yemen yesterday in a new show of strength by the militants, who have exploited the country’s turmoil to expand their territory.
Yemen, home to what the United States considers Al Qaeda’s most dangerous affiliate, has been convulsed by unrest since Iran-backed Shia Houthi rebels seized the capital Sanaa in September last year.
Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) has tightened its control over parts of southeast Yemen, including Mukalla, the capital of the vast province of Hadramout, imposing a strict form of Shariah law.
Yesterday the militants briefly took control of Jaar, a town in the southern province of Abyan to the west, in fighting that killed 15 people.
A military source described Jaar as a key link between Mukalla and the main southern city of Aden, the base of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi who returned from exile in Saudi Arabia last month.
Jaar is a stronghold of the pro-government “Popular Resistance” which includes Sunni Islamists, tribesmen, loyalist soldiers and southern separatists who have been fighting the Houthi rebels.
The Al Qaeda militants blew up the main Popular Resistance headquarters in the town and hunted down pro-government fighters, most of whom fled, witnesses said.
A military analyst in Aden, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation, described the assault as an attempt to “send a threat” to Hadi’s government.
A militant leader announced over loudspeaker from the attacked town’s Grand Mosque that AQAP had full control of “the emirate of Jaar” and that residents were now safe and life could go on normally, locals said by telephone.  
But hours later, no Al Qaeda militants could be seen in the town, witnesses said, while eight armoured vehicles deployed by the fighters left.
The militants withdrew after carrying out an operation that killed a Popular Resistance commander, Ali al-Sayed, and 10 of his fighters, a government official in Jaar said.
Four Al Qaeda militants were also killed, the official said.
Yemen has been engulfed by growing turmoil with pro-government forces supported by a Saudi-led coalition battling the Houthi rebels and their allies for months.
Underscoring the insecurity, two Red Cross workers were kidnapped in the capital on Tuesday by unidentified assailants.
One was later released but the other, a Tunisian female staffer, was being held hostage, the International Committee for the Red Cross said.
“The situation in Yemen is extremely fragile for an organisation like the ICRC and the national Red Crescent”, ICRC Director General Yves Daccord said in Geneva.
Rebel website sabanews.net quoted a source in the Houthi-controlled Supreme Security Council as saying that security services in Sanaa have “intensified efforts... to find the kidnappers and detain them”.
Pro-government forces have retaken five southern provinces, including Abyan and Aden, from the insurgents since July.
Islamist militants, including AQAP and the Islamic State group, have taken advantage of the turmoil and appear to have gained ground in and around Aden, where militants are now visibly present.
Since October AQAP has also occupied government offices in the Abyan provincial capital Zinjibar, located 12km south of Jaar.
By pushing pro-Hadi forces out of Jaar, Al Qaeda has secured its position in Zinjibar, according to Yemeni sources.  
This could allow them to strengthen their presence in Aden, while bringing in reinforcements from Mukalla further east along the coast.
The analyst described the move as a “show of force” by Al Qaeda, warning that “unless there is a decisive response by the coalition and pro-government forces, the militants will carry out more significant operations.”
The United States has waged a long-standing drone war against AQAP militants, killing several of its leaders.
In contrast, the Saudi-led coalition has not targeted Al Qaeda and has focused its war on the rebels instead.
“The coalition should not turn a blind eye to other dangers,” the analyst said, accusing former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, a Houthi ally who was forced to resign in 2012, of using militants as a “tool” against loyalists.
During an Arab Spring-inspired uprising against Saleh’s rule in 2011, AQAP seized Zinjibar and other parts of Abyan. Its fighters were defeated by local army-backed militias a year later.
Saudi Arabia faces growing casualties from the current unrest with eight civilians, including two children, wounded in cross-border shelling from Yemen on Tuesday evening, the civil defence agency said.  
More than 80 people have been killed in shelling and cross-border skirmishes in the Saudi border zone since coalition operations began in March.
The United Nations says more than 5,700 people have been killed in Yemen since then, nearly half of them civilians.



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