Source:The Majalla, By Nasser Arrabyee, 25/06/2013
Four Yemeni provinces in the north and east have witnessed
extremely dramatic events over the past few days. Despite the sporadic nature
of insurgent clashes, the fighting in Sa’ada, Hajjah, Jawf and Marib provinces
all had one thing in common: the absence of the government.
In Sa’ada, the main Houthi Shi’ite stronghold, at least two
people were killed and twelve others seriously injured on Wednesday when a
motorcycle suicide bomber, Ali Salem Al-Gharazi, blew himself up in the crowded
Othman Mujalli Market in Sa’ada city.
Observers say the bombing had the hallmarks of Al-Qaeda,
especially as it came only days after a renowned Shi’ite cleric called at a
funeral for jihad for those killed in clashes between Houthi Shi’ites and
soldiers guarding the country’s intelligence headquarters in the capital,
Sana’a.
In the neighboring province of Hajjah, groups of armed
tribesmen have surrounded Hajjah’s central prison for more than ten days. The
tribesmen are seeking to kill nineteen men languishing inside the prison before
they may be released.
The men inside the prison, who are also from Hajjah, were
put on trial for ambushing and killing Colonel Hamoud Kayed Hamza and three of
his bodyguards in April 2011.
The Islamist party to which the accused men belong, Islah,
demand their release, claiming that they are “revolutionaries” like the
seventeen men who were released from Sana’a central prison after similar
appeals were made earlier this month. The men were accused of involvement in
the failed assassination attempt on former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh
in June 2011.
Concerning the case in Hajjah, Islah submitted documents to
the general prosecutor and the current Yemeni president, Abd Rabbo Mansour
Hadi, in which they demanded the accused be released on the grounds that the
men were revolutionaries. The party called for the file to be closed and the
case be examined according to a transitional justice law currently being
drafted by those involved in the national dialogue process.
But the twenty-three-year-old son of the slain colonel,
Bashir Hamoud Hamzah, disagrees. “No, this is a purely criminal case, it had
nothing to do with the revolution at all,” Hamzeh argued.
Hamzeh has the backing of his tribe, as well as those who
knew his father as a “sincere security officer and tribal leader,” according to
one of the men surrounding the prison. “If these men are released, this would
mean that there is no need for courts and prosecutors; then we will be in
complete chaos,” agreed Alaa Taher.
Last month, President Hadi, under pressure from Islah,
ordered the general prosecutor to suspend the trial until the transitional
justice law passed. “It would be easier for us to kill these killers if they
are released, but it would be even more difficult for the president and all
Yemenis to have justice and a civil state; there would be chaos,” Hamzeh
contended.
On Tuesday, June 18, hundreds of armed tribesmen stormed and
gained control of local government buildings in Jawf, a province in the
northeast of the country that runs along Saudi Arabia’s southern border.
The tribesmen accuse the Islamist governor, Mohammed Salem
Abood, and his aides of embezzling millions of Yemeni rials. They also believe
he is favoring his own men and relatives from the Islamist party. Abood and
other officials, including the man in charge of security, escaped the scene
beforehand.
The spokesman for the attacking tribesmen, Hassan Abu
Hadrah, also accused the governor of having signed secret documents with Saudi
officials. “The documents signed in our names were only to justify more
injustice against us,” Abu Hadrah said over the phone from where his men now
occupy government buildings.
The Jawf tribesmen, especially Thu Hussein tribesmen, have
appealed to Hadi to replace the runaway governor with someone who can prevent
further bloodshed. Jawf’s tribesmen have closed the local branch of the central
bank, fearing it may be looted. They have also formed, from among their number,
popular committees to protect private and public property in the absence of
government authorities.
Abood escaped to his tribesmen in the neighboring province
of Marib, where angry tribesmen keep sabotaging the country’s most vital supply
routes for oil, gas and electricity. Abood refutes claims that he left for
Marib because his office was stormed. He stated that he went to Marib on
assignment, saying that things were all right in his governorate.
This week, the Yemeni government sent additional military
personnel to protect the electricity towers and oil and gas pipelines from
saboteurs in Marib. Those deliberately disrupting supply hope to wield some
power in having their demands heard. Often, they are pushing the government for
the release of relatives accused of murder or linked to terror.
Before sending the additional forces, the government tried
to appease some of the local leaders by paying them approximately USD 250,000,
in the hope that they would then allow technicians in to repair the damage.
However, paying off some tribesmen angered others. Salem
Ahmed Al-Dhemen, a leader from Damasheka, a region in Marib, defiantly
announced he would keep sabotaging electricity and oil pipelines if the
government did not meet his demands. Dhemen says he wants fair compensation for
his father and seven other people from his family who were killed in 1994.
Dhemen says that the government has been procrastinating
since 1994, and have yet to meet his demands. The ultimatum he gave ended on
Tuesday, June 18, 2013. He threatened that, should the government not
compensate him, he would sabotage electricity and oil lines in his area in
Damasheka. Dhemen is one of three tribal leaders who publicly admit to sabotage
to leverage the government. The government is unable to meet their demands, but
it is also unable to prevent tribesmen from holding the country’s supplies
hostage.
Tanks and armored vehicles with hundreds of soldiers are now
surrounding the areas where saboteurs are based in the east of the country. The
tribesmen who sabotage are not hiding: they are actually readying themselves to
fight.
I think the information is not complete.
ReplyDeleteTogel Online
ReplyDeleteBandar Togel Terpercaya
Bandar Togel
Agen Togel Terpercaya
Situs Casino Online
Casino Online Indonesia
Bandar Casino Online
Bandar Togel Online