Aden: Suspected Al Qaida gunmen shot and wounded a Yemeni man accused of being a homosexual, days after killing another one, a security official said on Saturday.
Mohammad Saeed, 25, was standing outside his home in Huta, the capital of the southern Lahj province, when a gunman shot and wounded him, the official said.
Late Monday, two militants from the Al Qaida-affiliated Ansar Al Sharia group, which is on the US terror list, shot dead 20-year-old Hashem Al Asmi, also in Huta, also for allegedly being “gay”.
Ansar Al Sharia is the local branch of Al Qaida in Yemen where the network, although weakened, is still active mainly in the southern and eastern parts of the country.
The army, also backed by US drone attacks, managed to retake control of the country’s south, of which large swathes of land had been seized by Al Qaida militants.
Although weakened the network still carries out hit-and-run attacks against army and police targets and occasionally assassinates members and leaders of the Popular Resistance Committees.
During their control of areas in south Yemen, the Islamist militants imposed a strict version of Sharia (Islamic law) on residents, executing or lashing those they accused of various crimes. Those accused of theft had their hands severed.
Elsewhere in south Yemen, the separatist Southern Movement said that two of its top leaders, Salah Shanfara and Khalid Masaad, were the targets of a failed assassination bid.
The men came under gunfire in the southern Daleh province late Thursday, the group said in a statement, holding the Sana’a government responsible for the attack.
The Southern Movement seeks autonomy or secession for the formerly independent south.
After the former North and South Yemen united in 1990, the south broke away in 1994, triggering a civil war that ended with the region being overrun by northern troops.
Southerners have complained of discrimination and being marginalised ever since.