Monday, 5 October 2009

4 rebels killed 12 arrested

By Nasser Arrabyee/06/10/2009

At least 4 Al Houthi rebels were killed and 12 others arrested inside the city of Sa'ada and the areas around it, officials said Tuesday.

"The terrorists Abu Kawthar, Abu Akeel, Abu Bakeel, and Abu Thar were killed in a swift operation implemented on the hideout of the terrorist Ali Abdullah Bukhtan," said a military statement.

A car and a 12.7 machine gun were also destroyed in the attack, which was implemented in the areas around the Sa'ada city where rebels tried repeatedly to take control despite defeats and losses.

A group of six rebels were arrested Monday inside the old city of Sa'ada and the other six were arrested in the areas around the city, said Mohammed Abdullah Al Kawsi, deputy minister of interior.

Al Kawsi, who is based in Sa'ada city from the beginning of the war, is the official in charge of supervising special operations implemented against hidden fighters of Al Houthi in some zones of the old city.

Al Kawsi made it clear that the number of those arrested in the old city from the beginning of the war on August 10th, is now about 200 rebels. But, he said 40 of them were released after being proved not involved in the armed rebellion.

Two workshops used by the rebels for making mines and explosives were destroyed by air strikes at Oraig area which is between Sakeen and Haidan districts, said the military statement.

"The workshops remained afire for hours after the bombing," the statement said.

The car of the rebel field leader Roh Allah Al Katabiri was destroyed with the fighters on board in Al Salem area, the statement said.

On their side, the rebels said they shot down a Mig 29 fighter over the areas around Sa'ada city, specifically in Al Makash area late Monday. The army confessed, but said that a Russian-made Sokhoi fighter crashed over the area due to a technical fault.

This is the second fighter to be crashed within one week, from the beginning of the war.

The army has been focusing on air strikes over the last few days with the troops making no progress in the ground in almost all the frontlines.

Military experts say air bombings will pave the way for a massive ground attack on the remaining strongholds of the rebels.

The President Ali Abdullah Saleh met earlier this week in the capital Sana'a with new brigades who were in their way to Sa'ada for enhancing the big forces already there.

Weapons cargo to Al Houthi rebels foiled

By Nasser Arrabyee/05/10/2009

The Yemeni government said Monday it had foiled an attempt import weapons from China for Al Houthi rebels. The cargo of weapons was with forged official documents.

A black list of the weapon traders, most of them from Sa'ada, was published Monday, including Fares Mana'a, brother of Sa'ada province and the chairman of the Presidential Committee in charge of negotiation with the rebels.

The government warned the weapon traders from importing any more weapons and asked the Chinese companies of weapons to deal only with the Ministry of Defense.

For developments in the ground, at least five Al Houthi rebels were killed and several others injured in clashes with the security forces in the old city of Sa'ada where hidden rebels are using their houses for attacking troops, local and military sources said Monday.

About 170 rebels were arrested in the old the city of Sa'ada from the beginning of the war in August 10th.

The aircrafts continued bombing the strongholds of the rebels in Bani Moath as artillery shelled some positions and movements in the other two main frontlines of Harf Sufyan and Al Malahaid, military sources said.

Meanwhile, the Secretary General of the Arab League, Amr Moussa is scheduled to arrive in the Yemeni capital Sana'a today Tuesday for talks about the volatile situation in the country, official sources said Monday.

Moussa will discuss with the Yemeni officials at the top of whom the President Ali Abdullah Saleh, the latest developments especially the war against the armed rebellion in Sa'ada north of the country, the sources added.

Sana'a has been witnessing remarkable political and diplomatic activities, as the government mobilizes regional and international support to crush the Iranian-backed Al Houthi armed rebellion.

Yesterday Sunday, the Egyptian foreign minister Ahmed Abu Al Ghait, and the head of intelligence Omar Sulaiman handed over a letter to President Saleh from his counterpart Husni Mubarak who confirmed his country's full support for the unity, security and stability.

Egypt, supported by many other Arab countries, is trying to contain the crisis of the war between the Al Houthi rebels and the government troops on one hand, and the secession calls in the south on the other.

Observers say that the visit of the two Egyptian officials was a turning point and an indication that the regional concern about what is happening Yemen is not only expressed through media now but also through diplomacy and intelligence.

The political analyst, Mohammed Al Sabri, said Yemen needs an external help but not interference for expanding influence.

"Yes, Yemen needs help from all, but they should not race for influence," said Al Sabri.

The Vice Admiral William McRaven commander of the Joint Special Operations Command met the President Ali Abdullah Saleh also on Sunday and discussed with the cooperation aspects between the two governments to fight Al Qaeda in Arabian Peninsula.

"These discussions support the US government's ongoing efforts to assist Yemen in eliminating the threat Al Qaeda poses to its security and stability," said a statement issued by the US embassy in Sana'a.

Head of Arab league visits Yemen


By Nasser Arrabyee/05/10/2009

The Secretary General of the Arab League, Amr Moussa is scheduled to arrive in the Yemeni capital Sana'a tomorrow Tuesday for talks about the volatile situation in the country, official sources said Monday.

Moussa will discuss with the Yemeni officials at the top of whom the President Ali Abdullah Saleh, the latest developments especially the war against the armed rebellion in Sa'ada north of the country, the sources added.

Sana'a has been witnessing remarkable political and diplomatic activities, as the government mobilizes regional and international support to crush the Iranian-backed Al Houthi armed rebellion.

Yesterday Sunday, the Egyptian foreign minister Ahmed Abu Al Ghait, and the head of intelligence Omar Sulaiman handed over a letter to President Saleh from his counterpart Husni Mubarak who confirmed his country's full support for the unity, security and stability.

Egypt, supported by many other Arab countries, is trying to contain the crisis of the war between the Al Houthi rebels and the government troops on one hand, and the secession calls in the south on the other.

Observers say that the visit of the two Egyptian officials was a turning point and an indication that the regional concern about what is happening Yemen is not only expressed through media now but also through diplomacy and intelligence.

The political analyst, Mohammed Al Sabri, said Yemen needs an external help but not interference for expanding influence.

"Yes, Yemen needs help from all, but they should not race for influence," said Al Sabri.

The Vice Admiral William McRaven commander of the Joint Special Operations Command met the President Ali Abdullah Saleh also on Sunday and discussed with the cooperation aspects between the two governments to fight Al Qaeda in Arabian Peninsula.

"These discussions support the US government's ongoing efforts to assist Yemen in eliminating the threat Al Qaeda poses to its security and stability," said a statement issued by the US embassy in Sana'a.

Sunday, 4 October 2009

5 rebels killed 16 arrested

By Nasser Arrabyee 04/10/2009

A total of 5 Al Houthi rebels were killed and 16 others were arrested in different places in Saada, north of the country, the Defense Ministry said Sunday.

In an official statement, the Ministry said 3 rebels were killed in the mountain of Kais and two others in Bait AlHakem area.

Three cars laden with weapons and fighters were destroyed and burnt in these areas, the statement said.

For the 16 who were arrested, the statement said that 6 of them were arrest in Zeelali checkpoint, and the remaining 10 were arrested in the old city of Saada, where hidden rebels from the local residents try from time to time to attack the security forces in the city which is under the control of the local authority and the army.

With these arrest, the number of the rebels arrested in the city of Saada has become 177 from the beginning of the war in August 10.

44 of them were already referred to prosecution for trials in charges of carrying out sabotage acts.

Meanwhile, a nation-wide campaign for collecting blood donations for the favour of the armed forces decided Sunday to extend its works until next Tuesday.

The national campaign, which received blood donors from all over the country, started its works last Tuesday to enhance the state’s efforts for ending the armed rebellion.

On their side, the rebels killed 4 people in an attack on the charitable association of AlSunbula in Attalh area, north west of Saada city, local sources said.

The rebels accused the people in charge of the association of cooperation with the troops, the sources said.

Saturday, 3 October 2009

Yemen war continues



As the conflict in Yemen intensifies, attention is turning to the growing number of civilian casualties, reports Nasser Arrabyee


It has been 50 days since the so-called Scorched Earth operation was launched by Yemeni government troops on Al-Houthi Shia rebels in the north of the country, so far without obvious results.

While battles have intensified, with hundreds being killed and injured and thousands fleeing their homes, the rebels themselves claim that they have not started "the real war yet", and have hurled threats that this will "go beyond the government's imagination" when they do so.

For the Yemeni government's part, this has said that it will defeat the rebels even if it takes a matter of years to do so.

"We will not backtrack, so let the battles continue for five or six years, the war will not stop," Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh said at a ceremony held last Saturday to mark the 47th anniversary of the country's 26 September Revolution.

"Go ahead. Do not stop," chanted attendees at a celebration attended by state officials, politicians, diplomats and NGO representatives held at the country's War College.

Saleh said that the Al-Houthi rebellion was part of a "war" against the revolution that had overthrown what he described as the "reactionary, backward, clerical, racial and tyrannical nature" of Zaidi-Shia clerical rule in 1962.

He also called on Yemenis to line up behind his policy of ending the Al-Houthi rebellion and the Al-Qaeda insurgency in the country.

Unlike during previous rounds of the rebellion, which started in mid-2004, Saleh has been keen to attend the funerals of senior officers killed in battle, and he has announced that a special department to care for the families of those killed will be set up in the presidential office.

As president, Saleh is also commander-in-chief of the Yemeni armed forces.

Saleh also said that he expected the cost of treating the impacts of the war to be much higher than the 10 billion Yemeni rials ($50 million) estimated for reconstruction efforts at the end of the fifth round of the rebellion in July 2008.

He said that the rebels aimed to restore the clerical rule of the Zaidi imams overthrown during the 1962 Revolution, though the rebels themselves have denied this, saying that such "accusations about the imamate are just part of the media war and are aimed at misleading public opinion."

"We are not asking for positions. We are asking for rights and justice," the rebel group said in a statement on its website.

The Yemeni government, which faces increasing secessionist sentiment in the south and growing Al-Qaeda insurgency elsewhere in the country, has international and regional support for ending the rebellion.

The foreign ministers of the US, the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), Egypt, Jordan and Iraq in a meeting with their Yemeni counterpart on the margins of the recent UN General Assembly meeting in New York issued a joint statement supporting what they called the unity, security and stability of Yemen.

Despite the government's efforts, however, fierce battles continue between government troops and the rebels, and as they do so the humanitarian situation in the country is getting worse.

Some international relief agencies working in Yemen have warned of a "humanitarian crisis" in the country if a ceasefire is not agreed soon, since food and other forms of assistance are running out and there is increasing difficulty in reaching the thousands of people displaced by the conflict.

Some 70 displaced families stranded for two weeks at the Alab Crossing in the far north of Saada on the border with Saudi Arabia appealed on Tuesday to President Saleh to coordinate with the Saudi authorities to allow them to enter Saudi territory, where they said they had relatives who would help them.

"About 150 women and children are staying in a mosque in the Alab area, and the men are sleeping outside without even blankets," said Ahmed Hadi Sabhan from the Bakem area.

No relief organisations have thus far been able to reach areas inside Saada, such as Bakem in the far north of the Saada province, because the rebels are blocking the main road in Harf Sufyan, where the fiercest battles are continuing.

More than 60,000 people have thus far been displaced by the conflict, the latest round of which erupted on 10 August. UN agencies estimate the total number of those displaced during the conflict's first round in 2004 at 150,000.

If the northern neighbour of Yemen, Saudi Arabia, cooperates by allowing relief organisations to go through its territory, the humanitarian situation would get better, and reports said on Tuesday that Saudi Arabia had indeed agreed to cooperate in helping those displaced.

For its part, the Yemeni government has called on relief organisations working in Yemen to go directly to the refugee camps and assist the displaced, threatening to withdraw accreditation to agencies that make what it described as "media noise" rather than helping those affected by the conflict.

"Some NGOs are just making media noise, and we will withdraw the licences of these organisations if they do not come down to the field to help us," said Abdel-Karim Rase, the Yemeni minister of health and chairman of the ministerial committee coordinating relief efforts.

Meanwhile, a government-supported popular committee was formed on Tuesday to collect blood donations for injured soldiers.

According to Zaid Ali Hajar, chairman of the committee, this was due to launch its work on Wednesday in Al-Sabeen Square in the capital Sanaa. The first stage of the work would focus on blood donations, while following stages would include other forms of donation for both soldiers and the displaced.

However, it seems that civilians are now being used by both sides for media purposes, drawing the attention of the international community and relief agencies to the conflict in Yemen.

While the leader of the rebels has appealed to the international community, claiming that those affected by the conflict are not receiving assistance or protection, for its part the government has accused him of shedding crocodile tears, describing him as "a criminal claiming to be a victim".

"The criminal Al-Houthi should realise there is no future before him but to accept the government's five conditions for stopping the war. The rebels will be brought to justice sooner or later, and the fate of the criminal Abdel-Malik Al-Houthi will not be better than that of his slain brother Hussein," the Yemeni government said in a statement.

The rebel leader has claimed that government aircraft used in the conflict have been launching round-the-clock air strikes at areas occupied by women and children.

For its part, the government has said that the rebels are using civilians as "human shields".

Nine people were executed last week in the Marran area on the orders of the rebel leader Al-Houthi, when they had only been trying to find asylum from the conflict, the government said.

Two Pakistanis sentenced to death in Yemen for drug smuggling


By Nasser Arrabyee/03/10/2009

Tow Pakistani nationals were sentenced Saturday to death and two others sentenced to 25 years in prison for smuggling drugs to Yemen.

Chaired by Judge Redhwan Al Namer, the Yemen State Security special court acquitted seven other Pakistanis of the same charges of bringing drugs to Yemen.

Late last year, the 11 Pakistanis were put on trials for charges of bringing to Yemen 1600 km of Hashish "Ratang" from the Pakistani harbour of Kawader on a boat called Zaher.

The 11 Pakistanis were arrested at the Yemeni eastern coasts of Al Mukalla on June 2008.

Over the last few years, activity of drug smuggling remarkably increased through the Yemeni eastern coasts to Yemen and the neighbouring Gulf countries.

Hundreds of smugglers including Pakistanis, Iranians, and Syrians, were arrested in the Yemeni coasts over the last two years, with dozens of tons of drugs in their possession.

Friday, 2 October 2009

More than 40 rebels killed


By Nasser Arrabyee / 03/10/2009

A total of 40 rebels were killed and many others injured and arrested during the last 24 hours in different places of the three main frontlines of Sa'ada war between Al Houthi rebels and government troops, a military statement said Saturday.

A group of 30 rebels were killed including five field leaders in Al makash and Tho Sulaiman areas around the Sa'ada city, said the statement.

The statement identified three of the five dead field leaders as Ali Mohammed Kaed Habash, Yahya Mohammed kaed Habash, and Ali Kutaish Al Hasani.

A group of 10 rebels were killed in fierce battles between the armed tribesmen and the rebels who tried to turn the citizens farms into ditches and trenches in Al Ghalah area.

From their side, the rebels pounded with artillery on some zones of the city of Sa'ada killing two people and injuring seven others, local sources in the city said. The sources mentioned those who were killed and injured in that bombardment by names.

The rebels also destroyed a total of 15 houses and two mosques in an artillery shell on area of Bakem, far north of the city of Sa'ada, where tribesmen fight with troops against the rebels, said independent local and military sources.

The owners of the houses were mentioned by names, and the two destroyed mosques were called Al Othman mosque and Al Haidar mosque.

A fighter jet crashed Friday over the mountains of the main frontline of Al Malahaid, west of Sa'ada, which is the first air loss in the 53-day old war that focused on the aerial attacks from the beginning.

The rebels said that they downed it while the army said it collided with a mountain after a technical fault happened to it.