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Qaeda fighters seize town; rival parties trade charges

Qaeda fighters seize town; rival parties trade charges

January 16, 2012 | 12:00 AM

A protester shouts slogans during a march demanding the trial of outgoing Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sanaa yesterday

Reuters/Sanaa

Al Qaeda militants have seized a small town southeast of Yemen’s capital Sanaa yesterday in another setback to efforts to restore order after President Ali Abdullah Saleh formally handed over power following almost a year of mass protests against his rule. A police source and witnesses said the militants met little resistance from a small police force when they entered the town of Radda in Al Baydah province, 170km from Sanaa, on Saturday night, seizing an ancient citadel and mosque. The capture of Radda expanded Al Qaeda control outside the southern province of Abyan, where they have taken over several towns since the uprising against Saleh began. Saleh signed a deal brokered by Yemen’s Gulf neighbours in November under which he shifted formal power to his deputy. But he has not yet left the country and continues to wield a great deal of power through relatives’ control of security forces, raising concern about the integrity of the deal. “I call again on President Saleh to abide by the terms of the agreement,” UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said in Beirut during a Middle East visit, noting that a UN mediator had been “at the heart of negotiations” with Saleh. The anti-Saleh unrest has emboldened groups linked to Al Qaeda’s Yemen-based regional wing, which the US has called the most dangerous branch of the militant network.  The US and Saudi Arabia are keen for the Gulf-backed power transfer deal to work, fearing that a vacuum in Yemen may give Al Qaeda space to thrive near key oil and cargo shipping lanes in the Red Sea.  Underscoring the continued lawlessness in Yemen, a Norwegian working for the UN was kidnapped in Sanaa at the weekend, Norway’s foreign ministry said. A tribal source said the Norwegian was abducted by tribesmen from oil-producing Maarib province demanding the release of a suspect accused of killing two members of the security forces. Residents in Radda, which has a population of around 60,000, said the militants who took over the town were led by Tareq al-Dahab, who had been handed over by Syria to Yemen recently after being detained while trying to slip into Iraq. Dahab is a brother-in-law of a US-born, Yemen-based Muslim cleric linked to Al Qaeda killed in an air strike last year. Yahia Abu Usba, deputy head of the Yemeni Socialist Party and a Saleh critic, said security forces appeared to have done little to prevent militants entering Radda. He said Al Qaeda would target Maarib province next, bringing it closer to Sanaa. But Abdo al-Janadi, a spokesman for Saleh’s General People’s Congress (GPC), rejected the charges and in turn accused opposition elements involved in the power transfer deal of collusion with the militants. “There is a link between the Islah and Al Qaeda,” he said, referring to the Islamist Al Islah party, a member of the bloc.

 

January 16, 2012 | 12:00 AM