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Militants exploit rifts to seize territory
Published in Al-Ahram Weekly on 26 - 03 - 2015

Saddam Al-Lahji could not believe what was happening in the small city of Al-Huta in the southern province of Lahj. On Wednesday, a mob of people wreaked havoc in the city, storming and looting the main government and security institutions, without facing much resistance from security forces.
The attackers, mainly locals, along with a few Al-Qaeda militants, began by attacking the Central Security Forces camp where they stole light weapons, ammunition and furniture.
“They stole fans, chairs and drawers,” Al-Lahji told the website Middle East Eye (MEE).
The attackers moved quickly to the police headquarters and General Security buildings, ransacking them as they had previous buildings. They engaged in brief clashes with guards at the governor's building and with Political Security (intelligence) guards as they entered.
“They killed all the soldiers who tried to resist them,” Al-Lahji said. By the end of the day, as many as ten soldiers had been killed in the attacks.

WHY NOW?: Like many people in his city, Al-Lahji could not find an explanation for the outbreak of violence in Al-Huta. Security forces and the army that gave up on Friday have repelled many attempts by the local branch of Al-Qaeda to capture the city.
“They used to have many checkpoints at the entrance of the city. Nobody responded to calls to protect the city from the vandals,” he said.
Yasser Al-Yafae, a local journalist who lives in the port city of Aden, linked the sudden escalation of violence in Lahj to the dramatic events in the nearby city of Aden.
On Thursday, forces loyal to beleaguered President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi defeated the Special Security Forces (SSF), a security unit loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, and expelled them from the city's airport. Hundreds of soldiers fled from the SSF camp as Hadi's forces attacked them with tanks, putting an end to a 20-day rebellion.
Following the humiliating defeat of their colleagues in Aden, Al-Yafae said, the SSF branch in Al-Huta took revenge on Hadi by retreating from the city with their heavy weapons and soldiers, creating a clear path for Al-Qaeda and other armed men to move in.
“The governor of Lahj is a stooge for Saleh. He handed over the province to the militants when Hadi was about to sack him,” Al-Yafae said. The governor of Lahj was not available to respond to the allegations.
The poverty-stricken country was plunged into a new wave of turmoil in January when Houthi rebels attacked the presidential palace, forcing Hadi and his prime minister, Khaled Bahah, to resign. The rebels put Hadi, Bahah and other officials under house arrest. Hadi fled south last month and is now based in Aden.
Hadi, however, has faced serious challenges from some security units who have refused to recognise his authority and have remained loyal to Saleh and the Houthis.
Abdulhafed Al-Saqqaf, the chief of security of Aden's SSF, has rejected Hadi's orders, claiming that Hadi wants to allow Al-Qaeda to control Aden. At first, Hadi appeared to be reluctant to use force to get rid of Al-Saqqaf, but the last straw was on Thursday, when Al-Saqqaf's forces captured part of Aden's airport.
Analysts say that Saleh and Houthis are moving to send troops to the south to remove Hadi from Aden after failing to overthrow him with the SSF.
“They put their weight behind Al-Saqqaf's forces to quickly retake Aden from Hadi,” Mohamed Al-Shaibani, deputy editor of the partisan Al-Tagamoa weekly newspaper, told MEE. “Now, they are looking into sending ground forces and using warplanes to bomb Aden.”
Al-Shaibani said that Saleh allied with the Houthis to get rid of his opponents, which include Hadi, who appeared to be aware of the threat.

BUILDING FORCES: Hadi's forces, which defeated the rival forces in Aden, include hundreds of members of popular committees from his hometown of Abyn, army troops and affiliated tribes. Hadi established these forces when tension flared between him and the Houthis.
Al-Shaibani said that Hadi is forming his own army to protect himself from two major forces: the Houthi-Saleh alliance and south Yemen separatists.
“Hadi knows that Saleh and Houthis have nothing to lose and they are coming for him,” he said.
Meanwhile, the Southern Movement (known as Hirak), which is calling for the revival of an independent state in south Yemen, has become more powerful since 2007.

SYRIA MODEL IN YEMEN: As Hadi was working hard to tighten his grip on the south, violence broke out in Sanaa Friday when two suicide bombers hit Houthi mosques, killing more than 110 and injuring hundreds more. The attack fuelled concerns about wider sectarian violence similar to Syria.
“The attacks targeted the biggest Houthi mosques in Yemen,” Al-Shaibani said.
Al-Qaeda militants threatened to fight the Houthis, who they see as nonbelievers. The Houthis and Al-Qaeda are two forces that will inflame sectarian warfare, according to Al-Shaibani.
“Ansar Allah [the Houthis] took advantage of insecurity in the north and Ansar Al-Sharia (Al-Qaeda) cashed in on turmoil in the south,” said Al-Shaibani.


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