http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2010/1013/re4.htm

26 August - 1 September 2010
Issue No. 1013

Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875

Al-Qaeda under fire
As the Yemeni government began a campaign against Al-Qaeda in the south of the 
country this week, peace talks with the Al-Houthi rebels started in the north, 
writes Nasser Arrabyee 

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Even as Qatari-sponsored peace talks opened in Doha this week to try to bring 
an end to the six-year-old conflict between the Yemeni government and Al-Houthi 
Shia rebels in the north of the country, another conflict, this time against 
Al-Qaeda, opened in the country's south. 

This week the Yemeni government launched a campaign against Al-Qaeda operatives 
in the south of the country, with some 18 operatives being killed over the last 
three days, including three foreigners, most of them Saudi nationals.

The campaign started when Al-Qaeda operatives killed some 15 government 
soldiers in an ambush in the Lawdar district of Abyan province in the south of 
Yemen on 13 August. Government forces had been surrounding the town of Lawdar, 
where some 60 Al-Qaeda operatives were barricaded in houses.

On Tuesday, the government said in a statement that the campaign against 
Al-Qaeda in the country would continue until it had "broken the back" of 
terrorism. The mountainous district of Lawdar, about 350km south east of the 
capital Sanaa, is the home district of top leader of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian 
Peninsula (AQAP) Nasser Al-Wahaishi. 

This week's deaths came after three Yemeni security officials were assassinated 
by Al-Qaeda militants in less than a week in the province of Abyan. 

Earlier this month, four Al-Qaeda operatives surrendered after being surrounded 
by government forces. Of the three men, Hezam Mujali and Ali Hassan Al-Tais are 
the most important, Mujali having escaped from prison in Sanaa in February 2006 
along with 23 other men and Al-Tais joining the AQAP after being released from 
the US detention centre in Guantanamo Bay in 2007. 

Lawdar is considered to be one of the most important strongholds not only for 
Al-Qaeda militants but also for southern separatists in Yemen. Both groups are 
accused of exploiting the mostly poor and unemployed young men of this remote 
district in order to gain recruits. 

According to the Yemeni government, the southern separatists have joined with 
the Al-Qaeda fighters, though the separatists say that the Al-Qaeda link is 
being used by the government as a justification to strike the southern 
movement. 

Southern opposition politicians outside Yemen condemned the government's 
strikes in the south of the country on Tuesday, as well as the siege imposed on 
Lawdar, saying that these were aimed at the southern separatist movement more 
than at the AQAP. 

"The strike on Lawdar is an attempt by the government to gain international 
support," said former southern president Ali Salem Al-Baidh, who calls for 
independence for the south of the country, on Tuesday in a statement from exile 
in Germany. 

Also on Tuesday, two other southern leaders said in a statement that the Yemeni 
government was concerned to target the southern movement rather than the AQAP. 

" What's happening in Lawdar has nothing to do with Al-Qaeda, but instead is 
part of a war on the south. It is a war on humanity, land and will," the 
statement said, which was issued by Ali Nasser Mohammed in Syria and Haidar Abu 
Bakr Al-Attas in Saudi Arabia. 

Both Mohammed and Al-Attas are in favour of solving the problems of the south 
within the framework of national unity, unlike Al-Baidh, who calls for the 
secession of the south. 

Southerners have been marginalised in Yemen since the 1994 civil war, during 
which Al-Baidh promoted efforts to secede. 

As violence continues in the south of Yemen, the situation in the north of the 
country is not much better, with at least 10 people being killed on Monday in 
clashes between Al-Houthi rebels and tribesmen loyal to the government in the 
Houth district of Amran province. 

These clashes come even as Qatari-sponsored peace talks began in Doha on 
Tuesday, with the aim of ending the six-year-old sporadic conflict between 
Al-Houthi Shia rebels and Yemeni government forces.

Delegations at the talks, one representing the Yemeni government and the other 
the Al-Houthi rebels, hope to bring peace to the war-torn Saada area of Yemen. 
The Al-Houthi rebels claim that the community they represent is politically, 
socially, economically and religiously discriminated against in Yemen.

The Yemeni government delegation at the Doha talks is headed by Ali Bin Ali 
Al-Qaisi, and it includes Mujahid Ghuthaim, chairman of Yemeni military 
intelligence, and Jalal Al-Ruwaishan, deputy chairman of the national security 
agency. 

Al-Qaisi is chairman of the committee charged with supervising the 
implementation of the six conditions set by the government and accepted by the 
rebels earlier this year with a view to ending the conflict.

The Al-Houthi delegation is headed by Youssef Al-Faishi, and it includes Dhaif 
Allah Al-Shami and Yehia Al-Houthi, who is based in Germany.

The Doha talks will focus on the details of implementing the six conditions for 
an end to the conflict, which include the rebels leaving their mountain 
strongholds, handing in their weapons and the release of detainees on both 
sides. 

None of these conditions has thus far been implemented, despite their agreement 
in February this year when the two sides announced a truce together with their 
desire to end the conflict. 






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