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Yemen - Civil War

Redheart

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Al Qaeda fighters seize Yemen army base, U.N. warns of civil war| Reuters

Al Qaeda-linked fighters seized a large army base in a dawn attack in southern Yemen on Thursday, militants and residents said, hours after the United Nations warned that the country was on the brink of civil war.

The base in the southern province of Shabwa, housing a brigade of up to 2,000 government soldiers, fell after several hours of heavy clashes, residents and local news sites said.

The al Qaeda-affiliated Ansar al-Sharia said on Twitter it had set off a suicide bomb at the gate and imprisoned some of the troops.

Al Qaeda and other Sunni Muslim militants have stepped up attacks since rival Iranian-backed Shi'ite Muslim fighters from the north seized the capital in September and started expanding across the country.

The Houthis have sidelined the central government and have clashed with Sunni tribesmen in Yemen, which borders oil giant Saudi Arabia.

"We believe the situation is very dangerous. Yemen is on the brink of civil war," Jamal Benomar, the U.N. Special Envoy to Yemen, said in an interview with television channels al Arabiya and al-Hadath late on Wednesday.

He accused all sides of contributing to the political and economic turmoil and called for more talks.

An official from the town of Beyhan near the seized army base said residents feared the Houthis would now move in to confront the Ansar al Sharia fighters.

"We are scared this (the capture of the army base) is going to be used as a justification for a Houthi attack and that they will take over Shabwa with the help of the army," the official said, refusing to be identified.

Ansar al-Sharia said after bombing the entrance of the base, it took control of three guard towers and one tank.

"By approximately eight o'clock in the morning, the mujahideen had imprisoned most of the soldiers inside," the group said on Twitter.

Yemen's government was a key ally of Washington in its war on al Qaeda. The United States has been carrying out drone strikes on militant targets for over a decade, many in the south.

But the United States, as well as Britain and France, closed their embassies in the capital Sanaa on Wednesday, citing security concerns since the Houthi takeover.

Yemen is also home to Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, one of the global network's most active arms that has carried out attacks abroad.
 

KimberlyD

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I meant to write 8 and hit the 2 by mistake without realizing it. LOL but yeah... it is not 10.

8-year-old Yemeni child dies at hands of 40-year-old husband on wedding night | Al Bawaba

8-year old married girl in Yemen dies after 40-year old husband forces sex

And it is not rare. It is a common occurrence. They tried to up the minimal marriage age there, but there was a fight that Muslim law does not dictate a minimal age for marriage and the idea was thrown out. The country is poor and so many families marry their young daughters off for money or to allow for their daughters to have a better future.
 

BLACKEAGLE

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GCC demands forceful U.N. action on Yemen

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Anti-Houthi protesters shout slogans against the dissolution of Yemen's parliament and the takeover by the armed Shiite Muslim Houthi group, during a rally in the southwestern city of Taiz, February 10, 2015. (Reuters)

By Staff writer | Al Arabiya News
Saturday, 14 February 2015

Gulf Arab states called on the United Nations Saturday to take forceful action over Yemen, where a Shiite militia has seized power amid concerns that the country is collapsing.

Yemen’s six Gulf neighbors called on the “U.N. Security Council to take a decision under Chapter Seven of the United Nations Charter,” which allows the use of military force if there are breaches of the peace or acts of aggression.

They made their statement after holding an extraordinary ministerial meeting in Riyadh Saturday to discuss developments in the restive country.

The meeting comes as two of the Gulf Cooperation Council’s six member nations, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, announced that they had temporarily suspended their embassies’ operations in Sanaa and evacuated staff for security reasons.

Similar measures have been taken this week by the United States, France, Germany, Italy, Britain, the Netherlands and Spain.

On Saturday, tens of thousands of Yemenis took to the streets in several parts of the country in a second day of nationwide demonstrations in less than a week to protest against the Houthis’ seizure of power.

"Houthi, Iran: Yemen is not Lebanon!" protesters in the city of Ibb, which the militia have held since last year, chanted in reference to the militia's alleged support from Shiite-dominated Iran.

Witnesses said the Houthis fired warning shots to disperse the protest in Ibb, leaving at least six people wounded.

On Friday, the Houthis set up a presidential council to take over power from the presidency, a move which further deepens the chaos after Yemen's president and premier submitted resignation last month.

U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon told the Security Council on Thursday that Yemen was on the brink of collapse, as he appealed for action to stop the country's slide toward anarchy.



(With AFP)


Last Update: Saturday, 14 February 2015 KSA 22:24 - GMT 19:24
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2015/02/14/GCC-to-meet-in-Riyadh-on-Yemen-crisis-.html
 

Redheart

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ISIS is now in Yemen. How the Cancer spreads.

Al Qaeda supporters in Yemen pledge allegiance to Islamic State: group - Yahoo News

- A group of Islamist fighters in Yemen renounced their loyalty to al Qaeda's leader and pledged allegiance to the head of the Islamic State, according to a Twitter message retrieved by U.S.-based monitoring group SITE.

The monitoring group could not immediately verify the statement distributed on Twitter purportedly from supporters of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) based in central Yemen.

AQAP is considered the most powerful branch of the global militant network headed by Ayman al-Zawahiri and has previously rejected the authority of Islamic State which has declared a caliphate, or Islamic theocracy, in swathes of Iraq and Syria.

State authority in Yemen has unraveled since a Shi'ite Muslim militia formally seized power last week and the Sunni AQAP has sworn to destroy it, stoking fears of sectarian civil war.

"We announce the formation of armed brigades specialized in pounding the apostates in Sanaa and Dhamar," the purported former AQAP supporters wrote, referring to two central provinces.

"We announce breaking the pledge of allegiance to the sheikh, the holy warrior and scholar Sheikh Ayman al-Zawahiri ... We pledge to the caliph of the believers Ibrahim bin Awad al-Baghdadi to listen and obey," they said.

Militants in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula and Libya have also joined Islamic State, signaling a competition for loyalty among armed Islamists battling states in the Mideast and North Africa.
 

KimberlyD

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That is what cancer does.

I suspected this would happen. Not only is Yemen close by them, but they were susceptible to it. It was just a matter of time before it happened.
 

Redheart

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Others should learn a lesson from Yemen. We don't need ISIS to send brainwashed fighters over to attack us. Extremists who live amongst will one day decide to join ISIS and no one will be prepared for what might follow. Picture a lunatic whose pledge allegiance to ISIS on a busy street with a gun . . . lots of blood would flow. Makes me wonder if that's the reason why Islamophobia is on the rise in the West . . .

. . . ISIS having tarnished the reputation of Islam, innocent Muslims must be made to suffer for their savagery?
 

KimberlyD

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ISIS needs to be eliminated plain and simple. They are not just causing havoc for the world, they are turning the world against Muslims in general and that should not be. Past religious wars and hatred has shown how bad it can get and its implications. We do not need another crusades or inquisition or witch hunt. This really needs to end and end now.
 

Scorpion

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Yemen crisis: Air raid on president's palace in Aden
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Aden has been President Hadi's base since he fled the capital Sanaa last month

Warplanes have targeted the palace used by Yemen's President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi in the southern city of Aden.

Officials said anti-aircraft guns prevented any direct hits on the hilltop compound. But witnesses saw smoke rising from the area afterwards.

It is not clear if Mr Hadi was inside, but aides said he was now safe.

Earlier, there were clashes at Aden's airport between troops and militiamen loyal to Mr Hadi and those backing his predecessor and the Houthi rebels.

At least six people were killed as the president's forces repelled an assault, which forced the airport's temporary closure.

Aden has been the president's base since he fled the Sanaa last month, after being placed under effective house arrest by the rebels when they took full control of the capital in January and declared that a five-member "presidential council" would rule the country.

'Under control'
The deputy editor of the al-Ayam newspaper in Aden, Bashraheel Bashraheel, told the BBC that he heard fighter jets flying over the city at about 15:30 local time (12:30 GMT).

"Then we heard a loud bang and anti-aircraft guns firing from the presidential palace," he added. "Some witnesses who live within a few hundred metres of the palace saw smoke coming out of the buildings."

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At least five people were killed in Thursday's clashes at Aden's international airport
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Passengers were stranded at the terminal during the fighting, but flights later resumed
Officials said the warplanes fired at the compound but missed the palace, hitting a nearby hillside. No damaged was caused and no-one was believed to have been hurt, they added.

A security source told the Reuters news agency that the situation "was under control and there was nothing to be worried about".

It was not immediately clear if the president was inside the palace at the time of the attack.

One of Mr Hadi's aides told the Associated Press that he had not been there, but another was quoted by the AFP news agency as saying that the president had now been "evacuated to a safe place".

The officials said the planes were flown by pilots allied to the Houthis and former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who handed over power to Mr Hadi in 2011 after mass protests against his rule.

Sky News Arabia reported that the planes had taken off from al-Dulaimi air base in Sanaa.

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The fighting at Aden's airport began when troops from the Special Security Forces, a police unit loyal to Mr Saleh, stormed the facility after claiming that they had been fired on from nearby buildings, an army official told the New York Times.

Mr Hadi's forces regained control of the airport after reinforcements arrived with tanks and armoured vehicles several hours later.

The army official said they were now moving to take control of the Special Security Forces' headquarters.

The president tried earlier this month to dismiss the head of the unit, Gen Abdul Hafez al-Saqqaf, in a bid to strengthen his hold on Aden.

Correspondents say the air raid on the compound and the fighting at the airport suggest the Houthis and Mr Saleh's supporters are taking the battle to President Hadi in Aden in order to prevent him from consolidating his new power base in the south.


BBC News - Yemen crisis: Air raid on president&[HASHTAG]#039[/HASHTAG];s palace in Aden
 

Falcon29

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Houthis seize strategic Yemeni city, escalating power struggle

ADEN (Reuters) - Houthi fighters opposed to Yemen's president took over the central city of Taiz in an escalation of a power struggle diplomats say risks drawing in neighboring oil giant Saudi Arabia and its main regional rival Iran.

Residents of Taiz, on a main road from the capital Sanaa to the country's second city of Aden, said that Houthi militias took over the city's military airport without a struggle from local authorities late on Saturday.

Eyewitnesses in the central province of Ibb reported seeing dozens of tanks and military vehicles headed southward from Houthi-controlled areas toward Taiz, while activists in the city said Houthi gunmen shot into the air to disperse protests by residents demonstrating against their presence.

Conflict has been spreading across Yemen since last year when the Houthis seized the capital Sanaa and effectively removed President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who now seeks a comeback from his base in Aden.

The advance of the Iranian-backed group has angered Sunni Gulf Arab states led by Saudi Arabia.

.......
 

UAE

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Houthis seize strategic Yemeni city, escalating power struggle

ADEN (Reuters) - Houthi fighters opposed to Yemen's president took over the central city of Taiz in an escalation of a power struggle diplomats say risks drawing in neighboring oil giant Saudi Arabia and its main regional rival Iran.

Residents of Taiz, on a main road from the capital Sanaa to the country's second city of Aden, said that Houthi militias took over the city's military airport without a struggle from local authorities late on Saturday.

Eyewitnesses in the central province of Ibb reported seeing dozens of tanks and military vehicles headed southward from Houthi-controlled areas toward Taiz, while activists in the city said Houthi gunmen shot into the air to disperse protests by residents demonstrating against their presence.

Conflict has been spreading across Yemen since last year when the Houthis seized the capital Sanaa and effectively removed President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who now seeks a comeback from his base in Aden.

The advance of the Iranian-backed group has angered Sunni Gulf Arab states led by Saudi Arabia.

.......

News roaming around that GCC Peninsula Shield might interfere in Yemen. If true, I don't think its a good idea at all. We can offer some air support but not dispatching ground troops.
 

Falcon29

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News roaming around that GCC Peninsula Shield might interfere in Yemen. If true, I don't think its a good idea at all. We can offer some air support but not dispatching ground troops.

A Kuwaiti official denies use of military force. I too believe it's not good idea. Because Aden is still in control of pro- Hadi forces and it doesn't seem like Houthis are making serious attempt to capture it. It's also early move which I believe is wrong if true. Problem is Saudi Arabia which borders Yemen.If houthis control it, they're afraid Iranian army will train and arm them and possible clash between Saudi and houthis could result in wider war. Also shia in Saudi Arabia might start protesting. KSA is in difficult position but rest of GCC isn't.
 

Scorpion

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A Kuwaiti official denies use of military force. I too believe it's not good idea. Because Aden is still in control of pro- Hadi forces and it doesn't seem like Houthis are making serious attempt to capture it. It's also early move which I believe is wrong if true. Problem is Saudi Arabia which borders Yemen.If houthis control it, they're afraid Iranian army will train and arm them and possible clash between Saudi and houthis could result in wider war. Also shia in Saudi Arabia might start protesting. KSA is in difficult position but rest of GCC isn't.

The Yemeni tribes are against the houthis and out them in numbers. Its hard for the Houthis to move right and left all at once. If there is a GCC military intervention it will no tho beyond a no fly zone and air strikes. No ground troops. Shia in Saudi Arabia are all kept under check. Majority of Shia are pro-govremnt. Only small numbers of trouble makers and can be dealt with easily. Saudi Arabia entered Bahrain and Shia in Saudi Arabia kept silence. Im not worry about that because I understand the structure of our society. In any case the Homeland Security know how to deal with any situations but hardly we are going to see Shia protest in Saudi Arabia if we were to interfere in Yemen.
 

KimberlyD

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The situation in Yemen is pretty bad. I was watching some news reports and saw this one about the four bombings of Mosque in the capital. It is a sad day when a person can not even go to their religious sanctuary to pray without fear of terrorist attacks.

 
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