Aden: Yemeni government forces captured Al Qaida’s main stronghold in the southern part of the country on Tuesday after insurgents blew up the local government compound there and fled, the Defence Ministry said.
The mountainous Al Mahfad area of Abyan province, along with Azzan in the adjacent province of Shabwa, has been the militants’ main stronghold in Yemen since 2012. In that year, the Yemeni army, with US help, drove the fighters from towns they had seized during a chaotic national uprising in 2011.
Major powers are keen on Yemen curbing the Islamist insurgents and restoring order in the south to prevent threats to top oil exporter Saudi Arabia next door. They also want to reduce any risk of Yemen being used as a springboard for attacks on Western targets.
The government forces’ offensive is the most concerted drive against Al Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) — seen by Washington as one of the group’s most lethal wings — in nearly two years. The group has been blamed for waging deadly attacks against security forces, foreigners and oil and gas facilities.
The Yemeni Defence Ministry’s website quoted an official military source as saying that soldiers and allied tribal militias — known as ‘popular committees’ — had entered Al Mahfad, a town of about 30,000-40,000 inhabitants on the main road from Abyan to the eastern Al Mahra province.
“The source said Al Qaida elements blew up the government building in Al Mahfad,” the ministry cited the source as saying.
A local militia commander, Amin Qassem, later said by telephone that the militants had put up stiff resistance.
“The army and the Popular Committee members have completed control of Al Mahfad and we are now in the centre of the district. Al Qaida elements have fled to the mountains, but we will keep going after them,” Qassem said.
Authorities have said dozens of militants of several nationalities have been killed during the latest offensive, now into its second week.
A Yemeni security source accused Al Qaida militants of using assassinations, including the killing of a Frenchman in an attack on Monday in the capital Sana’a, to deflect pressure on their fighters in the battlefront.
No one had claimed responsibility for the shooting of the Frenchman, who was working as a security agent for the European Union mission.
“It (the attack) comes as part of an attempt by elements of the (militant) organisation to influence the political and military leadership to ease pressure by the military and security units in Shabwa and Abyan on them,” the source said in a statement carried by state news agency Saba.
The offensive follows a series of air strikes, including by US drones, against insurgent bastions, in which Yemen said some 65 fighters had been killed.
Ali Mansour, an eyewitness of the fighting at Al Mahfad, said he was relieved by the army’s arrival.
“The entrance of the Yemeni army to Al Mahfad ends a long period of suffering that the residents had been living through while Al Qaida militants were present in the area,” Mansour said by phone. “Their presence meant worry and fear,” he added.
Witnesses said the army had used heavy artillery to push into Al Mahfad and security forces had set up checkpoints on the main road.
The Defence Ministry said in text messages that the army had captured seven suicide belts, 10 explosive devices and nearly 3,000 rounds of ammunition in Al Mahfad.
The fighting is still raging in Shabwa, the other front where the Yemeni army is tackling the insurgents, a local official said.
“We expect the main and decisive battles to be in the areas of Mayfa’a and Azzan,” the official said.
Last week a Yemeni official and tribal source confirmed the killing of the head of the AQAP cell in Al Mahfad, where Yemeni authorities said an air strike on April 20 had targeted the militants’ training camps.