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Restive Yemen hit by coup fears, clashes

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Yemeni troops were surrounding a mosque controlled by ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh Sunday amid fears he is plotting a coup, days after the ex-strongman's media outlets were silenced.

Also on Sunday, an Al-Qaeda suspect killed eight people in the south and fresh clashes erupted between security forces and Shiite Huthi rebels in the north, ending an UN-mediated 11-day truce.

Yemen's presidential guard, backed by armoured vehicles, has since late Saturday blocked access to the large Al-Saleh mosque in southern Sanaa, an AFP correspondent reported.

Saleh ruled Yemen for 33 years before he was forced out in February 2012 and replaced by his long-time deputy Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi under a UN- and Gulf-sponsored deal.

A source close to the presidency told AFP that weapons had been stored in the mosque and were being guarded by gunmen loyal to Saleh.

Former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh attends a festival on the first anniversary of the handov...
Former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh attends a festival on the first anniversary of the handover of power in Sanaa, on February 27, 2013
Mohammed Huwais, AFP

A tunnel connecting the site to the presidential palace had also been discovered.

Hadi suspects his predecessor is "plotting a coup", the source said, without elaborating further.

Saleh, who has his own bodyguards, boosted security around his residence in the Hada district, also in south Sanaa.

Saleh still heads the influential General People's Congress (GPC) party which holds half of the government's ministries and retains the loyalty of some elements in the military.

Critics accuse him of impeding the deeply tribal country's political transition.

The mosque siege came days after authorities closed the Yemen Today newspaper and television channel owned by Saleh.

The media outlets have often been accused of biased coverage of the post-Saleh government and of inciting protests in Sanaa against power cuts and water and fuel shortages.

- Several ministers sacked -

Yemeni police man a checkpoint in the northwestern province of Omran  on June 9  2014
Yemeni police man a checkpoint in the northwestern province of Omran, on June 9, 2014
Mohammed Huwais, AFP/File

Hadi, who is the GPC secretary general, sacked several ministers on Wednesday, including veteran foreign minister Abu Bakr al-Kurbi, known for his ties to Saleh who appointed him.

Kurbi was replaced by UN Ambassador Jamal Abdullah al-Sallal, another GPC member but close to Hadi, political sources in Sanaa said.

As political tensions simmered in the capital, a suspected Al-Qaeda gunman raked an army minibus carrying military hospital staffers in the main southern city of Aden, killing eight people, a military official said.

Two women were among the dead and 12 people were wounded.

"The bus was carrying doctors and nurses working for the military hospital in Aden," the official said.

"A mother who was with her two children on board" was wounded, he said.

The official blamed Al-Qaeda for the attack, which comes as the army presses an all-out offensive launched in late April against jihadist strongholds in the southern provinces of Shabwa and Abyan.

The army says 500 Al-Qaeda militants have been killed in the offensive, while 40 soldiers have died and 100 were wounded.

Al-Qaeda had seized swathes of the south and east, taking advantage of a collapse of central authority during the 2011 uprising that forced Saleh out.

They remain deeply entrenched in Hadramawt province farther east, where they have launched a series of spectacular assaults in past months.

Washington regards the Yemen-based Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) as the network's deadliest affiliate and has stepped up drone strikes targeting its leaders.

In the north, a truce agreed on June 4 between troops and Shiite rebels collapsed on Sunday.

Renewed fighting in Amran province closed the road linking it to the capital, tribal sources said.

No immediate casualty figures were known, they said.

Huthis, who have been battling the central government for years, are suspected of trying to expand their sphere of influence as Yemen is split into six regions, advancing from their mountain strongholds in the far north closer to Sanaa.

Yemeni troops were surrounding a mosque controlled by ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh Sunday amid fears he is plotting a coup, days after the ex-strongman’s media outlets were silenced.

Also on Sunday, an Al-Qaeda suspect killed eight people in the south and fresh clashes erupted between security forces and Shiite Huthi rebels in the north, ending an UN-mediated 11-day truce.

Yemen’s presidential guard, backed by armoured vehicles, has since late Saturday blocked access to the large Al-Saleh mosque in southern Sanaa, an AFP correspondent reported.

Saleh ruled Yemen for 33 years before he was forced out in February 2012 and replaced by his long-time deputy Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi under a UN- and Gulf-sponsored deal.

A source close to the presidency told AFP that weapons had been stored in the mosque and were being guarded by gunmen loyal to Saleh.

Former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh attends a festival on the first anniversary of the handov...

Former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh attends a festival on the first anniversary of the handover of power in Sanaa, on February 27, 2013
Mohammed Huwais, AFP

A tunnel connecting the site to the presidential palace had also been discovered.

Hadi suspects his predecessor is “plotting a coup”, the source said, without elaborating further.

Saleh, who has his own bodyguards, boosted security around his residence in the Hada district, also in south Sanaa.

Saleh still heads the influential General People’s Congress (GPC) party which holds half of the government’s ministries and retains the loyalty of some elements in the military.

Critics accuse him of impeding the deeply tribal country’s political transition.

The mosque siege came days after authorities closed the Yemen Today newspaper and television channel owned by Saleh.

The media outlets have often been accused of biased coverage of the post-Saleh government and of inciting protests in Sanaa against power cuts and water and fuel shortages.

– Several ministers sacked –

Yemeni police man a checkpoint in the northwestern province of Omran  on June 9  2014

Yemeni police man a checkpoint in the northwestern province of Omran, on June 9, 2014
Mohammed Huwais, AFP/File

Hadi, who is the GPC secretary general, sacked several ministers on Wednesday, including veteran foreign minister Abu Bakr al-Kurbi, known for his ties to Saleh who appointed him.

Kurbi was replaced by UN Ambassador Jamal Abdullah al-Sallal, another GPC member but close to Hadi, political sources in Sanaa said.

As political tensions simmered in the capital, a suspected Al-Qaeda gunman raked an army minibus carrying military hospital staffers in the main southern city of Aden, killing eight people, a military official said.

Two women were among the dead and 12 people were wounded.

“The bus was carrying doctors and nurses working for the military hospital in Aden,” the official said.

“A mother who was with her two children on board” was wounded, he said.

The official blamed Al-Qaeda for the attack, which comes as the army presses an all-out offensive launched in late April against jihadist strongholds in the southern provinces of Shabwa and Abyan.

The army says 500 Al-Qaeda militants have been killed in the offensive, while 40 soldiers have died and 100 were wounded.

Al-Qaeda had seized swathes of the south and east, taking advantage of a collapse of central authority during the 2011 uprising that forced Saleh out.

They remain deeply entrenched in Hadramawt province farther east, where they have launched a series of spectacular assaults in past months.

Washington regards the Yemen-based Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) as the network’s deadliest affiliate and has stepped up drone strikes targeting its leaders.

In the north, a truce agreed on June 4 between troops and Shiite rebels collapsed on Sunday.

Renewed fighting in Amran province closed the road linking it to the capital, tribal sources said.

No immediate casualty figures were known, they said.

Huthis, who have been battling the central government for years, are suspected of trying to expand their sphere of influence as Yemen is split into six regions, advancing from their mountain strongholds in the far north closer to Sanaa.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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