News for You Internet - - Yemen uses Al-Qaeda spectre to hit opposition - you-internet.co.uk

Yemen uses Al-Qaeda spectre to hit opposition

SANAA — Yemen's embattled government links armed Shiite rebels in the north, southern secessionists and resurgent Al-Qaeda militants, saying all three belong to an "axis of evil" in the Arabian Peninsula…


SANAA — Yemen's embattled government links armed Shiite rebels in the north, southern secessionists and resurgent Al-Qaeda militants, saying all three belong to an "axis of evil" in the Arabian Peninsula state.But analysts and diplomats say this is a willful deception intended at demonising even legitimate dissent and preparing the ground for a crackdown on challenges to the 31-year rule of President Ali Abdullah Saleh.Earlier this month, Yemen's Prime Minister Ali Mujawar warned countrymen that the southern secessionists and northern rebels stood together in an "axis of evil" with Al-Qaeda.But Mujawar, who will lead the government delegation to talks in London on Wednesday to seek support and foreign aid for Sanaa's anti-extremism drive, did not provide any evidence to prove such a link."The government rolls out this theory, which for the moment no one believes, that all this is a vast plot," said one diplomat in the capital who did not want to be identified.The government claims that "the Shiites of the north are related to Al-Qaeda... and political opponents of any kind in the South also," he said. "I do not believe that at all."Franck Mernier, the French co-author of "Contemporary Yemen", said that linking the southern and northern rebels to Al-Qaeda de-legitimises campaigns in the eyes of the international community."Putting everyone in the same basket and playing the Al-Qaeda card grants Yemen the authority to violently and arbitrarily suppress any challenge," he said."It de-legitimises any opposition and also makes it possible to obtain international support," Mernier added.Yemen, the ancestral home of Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, and a staging ground for Islamic militants who hide in its largely lawless tribal regions, has been under intense international pressure to uproot the extremists.Sanaa says it needs arms, money and training to do that. Yemeni officials have said they will insist on economic aid to fight extremism and poverty at the London conference.The meeting, to be attended by abou

last modification 2010-01-27 19:32:53

Add comment

Nick
Content