Armies of Liberation

Jane Novak's blog about Yemen

A shallow article with some good quotes

Filed under: Iraq, USS Cole, Yemen, prisons — by Jane Novak at 1:20 pm on Tuesday, February 21, 2006

There’s a lot I disagree with in this article, which perpetuaties many of the same tired stereotypes, propagnada and excuses created by the regime:

Khaldoun al-Hakimi was one of 10 prime suspects in the 2000 attack on the USS Cole when he broke out of a Yemeni prison in 2003. He was recaptured, jailed for eight months, then freed. Not long after that, he blew himself up in a suicide attack in Iraq.

“He told us he was going to check out job prospects in San`a,” said his brother Ghassan al-Hakimi, who lives in the southern port city of Aden. “Had we known he was going to Iraq, we would’ve stopped him.”

Many Yemeni men have slipped into Iraq to join other Arab recruits in the anti-U.S. insurgency. Some fear the fighters will return to Yemen with even more radical ideas – return to a homeland where sympathy for al-Qaida runs deep and weapons are as easy to buy as fresh vegetables.

As if to underline the country’s vulnerability, 23 convicted al-Qaida prisoners tunneled out of a high-security jail earlier this month in the capital San’a. Two of them have since turned themselves in.

A Western diplomat told The Associated Press on Monday the men appeared to have had help both inside and outside the prison.

Outside, they received guidance that helped them dig precisely to a point below the women’s restroom in a nearby mosque. The helpers then drove getaway vehicles.

Inside, corrupt prison officials gave cover during the two or three months it took the al-Qaida convicts to prepare their escape, the diplomat said.

The prisoners needed privacy to dig without being questioned about the noise and to dispose of the dirt shoveled out of the tunnel and prison officials appeared to have provided it. The diplomat said several prison officials were being questioned.

The prison break has raised concerns that the regime is reluctant to crack down on known radicals for fear of a militant backlash. Beyond that, it calls into question a government-sponsored program under which Muslim clerics try cajoling jailed, hardened Muslim radicals into repenting and pursuing a more moderate religious path. Several hundred militants have been freed under the program and some are believed to have headed for Iraq.

There is concern, too, over the militants who began to trickle back to their homes about six months ago, said a second Western diplomat. Those militants stand to be just as disruptive as al-Hakimi, who first got his militant training in Afghanistan.

“If these people had extreme beliefs before, they’re not going to come back calmed down,” said the diplomat, who spoke of a network of returnees trying to recruit young men at mosques and universities. Some of those returning are militants who were in Afghanistan.

Both diplomats spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject.

Yasser al-Awadi, deputy chairman of the Parliamentary bloc of the ruling General People’s Congress Party, said Yemenis are largely sympathetic with the militants as a matter of Muslim solidarity and because the West – the United States in particular – has undercut its standing with unpopular policies in the region. He cited the war in Iraq, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the publication of caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad.

“Even those who do not openly pray for bin Laden’s triumph over the Americans do so in their hearts,” al-Awadi said.

The Yemeni government has a problem at home and with its alliance with the U.S. because “the way it views the (militant) issue is different from the way the rest of society views it,” he added.

The government is trying to prevent young men from going to Iraq in a number of ways including making it difficult for them to travel to Syria, a main transit point.

“The men still manage to get away,” al-Awadi said.

Yemenis say the government should encourage them to stay home by providing jobs. An estimated 30 to 40 percent of Yemen’s work force is unemployed.

“The system should give more care to people like my brother,” said Ghassan al-Hakimi. “Stability makes men want to stay home, not go on such missions.”

He said the family had paid a high price for Khaldoun’s disappearance. One of his brothers, Wael al-Hakimi, was arrested about five months ago, three or four months after Khaldoun blew himself up, al-Hakimi said.

“They say they will not release him unless we give them Khaldoun. How can we produce him?” said al-Hakimi. The family learned of Khaldoun’s disappearance shortly after he left Aden to go look for a job in San`a.

Then they got a call saying Khaldoun, who was 30, had died in a “martyrdom” operation in Iraq. Al-Hakimi said he did not know when or where in Iraq his brother perished.

Al-Hakimi said he believes his brother went to Iraq after he lost hope finding a job when he was released from prison in March 2004. He may also have been troubled by his wife’s refusal to return to him after he was first arrested.

3 Comments »

1

Comment by Saba F. O. Al-Aghbari

2/22/2006 @ 11:39 am

Well, the article has a some valid points. Perhaps, Jane, you disagree with points relates to the state’s policy in the region. As to the prison officers and their suspicious role in the dramatic escape, it’s normal for any corrupted regime to loosen its grasp on its followers to cover its corruption by accusing those naughty followers and appear as an innocent system or may be a victim of those bad boys. We all know that the favorite song for Sana’a regime is “How corruption ruins its reputation”. But what ever the excuses are; the regime holds the responsibility of what happened. We should all adhere to this fact.

2

Comment by Jane

2/22/2006 @ 11:47 am

No, what I disagree with is the portrayal of all Yemenis as bin Laden loving and terrorist supporting. The regime frequently advances the idea that popular support of al-Qaeda in yemen is the reason it is unable to move more strongly in anti-terrorism. The Western media propagate this steortype over and over, and I am very tired of every article that starts out like this “Yemen, ancestoral home of Usama bin Laden….”

The article has this quote from a GPC leader: “Even those who do not openly pray for bin Laden’s triumph over the Americans do so in their hearts,” al-Awadi said.

Now even if its a little true or more, what kind of regime goes out of its way to make its own people look scary? An anti-democratic one.

It jsut annoys me that all, sorry for ranting.

3

Comment by Saba F. O. Al-Aghbari

2/23/2006 @ 11:30 am

Thank your very much for your clarification. You should know that not all Yemenis are admiring and/or sympathizers of bin laden, what did he do for us? what had he advanced to Yemen? what is his project? fighting the western countries?! and what is the next step?…, he will help us in invading the moon or invent a new cancer medicine, or alleviate poverty! non.

As you said the regime is spreading this propaganda to covers its weakness to combat terrorism seriously since this serves its internal policy. Thanks for your good understanding.

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