Armies of Liberation

Jane Novak's blog about Yemen

“The Yemeni Regime and al-Qaeda are Two Faces of the Same Coin”

Filed under: Yemen — by Jane Novak at 4:06 pm on Monday, June 30, 2008

An Urgent Call to the American Congress and Canadian Congress

From The Yemeni-American and Canadian –American Community

Date: 06/27/2008

To: The members of the American Congress and the Canadian Congress

From: the Yemeni-American and Yemeni-Canadian Citizens

Subject: The current Regime in Yemen and the Alqaeada terrorist organization are two faces of the same coin…They live together and they die together. The collapse of the regime in Sana’a is a collapse for the Alqaeda and all other terrorist organizations

Dear Honorable Ladies and Gentlemen … our representatives in the American and Canadian Congress

We would like to send our warmest greetings and our best wishes of health, progress and progress. We have felt the obligation to write this letter to you for the following reasons:

• First.
As Americans and Canadians from Yemeni background, we are proud that we are part of these great nations as full participants through our efforts, work, and sacrifices for the security, safety and progress of our two great nations. We believe that our two great nations play a leading and a prominent role in shaping the directions of the human civilization journey in the right path toward freedom, progress, development, peaceful coexistence, rule of law and order, freedom of expression, freedom of opinion, freedom of the press, freedom of religion and political opinion. This is a source of pride for us among nations and it is the direction that we firmly believe in.

• Second
Our civic duty toward the safety and security of our two nations dictate to us that we raise our voice loud and clear…that we, again, point our fingers toward the Wicked Wahhabi source of terrorism. We demand that these swamps of terrorism be dried up. The organization of Alqaeda represent its ideology that is based on a culture of hate and hostility. The truth is that this terror was nurtured in Saudi Arabia as its incubator and moved to Yemen as its backyard due to the help and safe haven that the dictatorial and corrupt regime in Yemen provided. The terrorists have been using Yemen as a base to spread their dark culture through justifying the killing of innocents, use of car bombs, human bombs that explode in markets, restaurants, and buses. We are constantly reminded by how the terrorists transformed civilian airliners into missiles to shoot down buildings with inncocent civilians inside. That event have unmasked the actions of the terrorists in front of the whole world and have shown the extent of hate and ugliness in their actions and ideology.
(Read on …)

MSF: Civilians Injured in Shelling, Denied Medical Access, Died in the Seige of Dhayan Sa’ada

Filed under: Medical, Saada War — by Jane Novak at 5:45 pm on Friday, June 27, 2008

Even without reading between the lines, its a tragic report. Access is impossible. Theres no news. The regime wont stop bombing to let the medical teams in. The number of injured in unknown. The government’s bombing of Dhayan was severe and sustained. Many injured civilians died when the ambulances were forced to turn back.

Doctors Without Borders One month ago, war returned yet again to the governorate of Saada, with numerous clashes involving heavy weaponry. For the time being, access is impossible, but there is reason to suspect the area contains injured people.

On Tuesday, June 17, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams working in the governorate of Saada were evacuated to Sanaa, the Yemeni capital. The decision to suspend activities in this region of North Yemen comes at a time of heavy fighting. Since May 10, MSF had been unable to deploy assistance in satisfactory conditions, whether for treating injured or assisting displaced persons.

It is difficult to know precisely what is happening in the areas of fighting, or areas controlled by the rebellion: access is prohibited for security reasons; there are no independent observers present; and most communication networks are severed. No numbers are available concerning dead or injured. However, the use of heavy weapons, aerial bombardment of villages, and information from other sources all leads to concern for civilian casualties.

Yet, most civilians have no access to adequate care structures. Civilians cannot always get to a hospital, either on account of the danger of travelling through the fighting, or because they fear being accused of supporting the rebellion, and therefore of being arrested. Even for medical staff, access to hospitals and health centers is complicated, sometimes impossible.

Difficult field conditions
Over the month between May 10 and June 8, only 56 injured, including 36 civilians, were treated in hospitals assisted by MSF, often in difficult conditions.

At Haydan, which received the majority of the injured cases treated by MSF (49 patients, including 31 civilians), members of the MSF team who were not Yemeni as well as those from other regions of Yemen had to evacuate to safety. The local staff continued to provide care, but with limited means and in perilous conditions. On May 27, these staff also had to abandon the hospital, managing nonetheless to take with them a limited quantity of equipment to allow improvising a treatment room in a shop in the village. Since June 9, the only staff left at Haydan have been a medical assistant and two nurses, of whom there is no news; the most qualified staff managed to reach Saada.

Furthermore, where MSF did receive precise information concerning injury victims requiring treatment, it was impossible to bring them in. This was notably the case at Dahyan, a village under rebel control, located a ten-minute drive from Al Tahl, which lies in the government zone. Before the war restarted, MSF gave consultations six days a week in the village. On May 11, the MSF team treated 25 women and children there who had been injured in shelling. Since their condition demanded evacuation, two ambulances left Al Tahl to pick them up after obtaining permission from the authorities. However, on account of heavy firing in the vicinity, the team was unable to evacuate them. The injured were aware that the ambulance had gone back. MSF later learned that seven of these patients died over the next 24 hours. Since then, there has been no news of the situation in Dahyan.

Several displaced-persons camps
Another consequence of the war, the most visible so far, is the number of people streaming out towards Saada or Al Malaheed, another town in the west of the governorate. These movements took place once tensions started rising in the region, or in the first days of the war.

In Saada and the surroundings, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and Yemeni Red Crescent estimate the number of IDPs at over 35,000. Some have rented houses or are staying with relations; others are installed in six camps around the town. Additionally, in the vicinity of Al Malaheed, MSF has recorded just over 1,000 families, dispersed in small groups. MSF has also received information concerning movements towards the north of the governorate, but cannot travel to that area.

Where MSF teams have been able to assess the situation, at Al Malaheed and Saada, it was unable to provide assistance to IDPs, for safety reasons and because discussions with the authorities and other aid agencies were not successful.

Given the context — war, and the impossibility of deploying suitable aid to meet the needs of injured and IDPs — MSF therefore took the decision to temporarily withdraw the non-Yemeni and non-local team members in North Yemen. At Haydan, the local team has been scaled back heavily, and there is no more information, while at Razeh and Al Tahl, the local staff continues to provide medical care for patients managing to reach the respective hospitals. MSF continues to negotiate with all sides to obtain access to areas where there is reason to believe there are injured people. Discussions with military leaders and all other authorities in Saada have not so far produced results, and other talks continue at the highest level in Sanaa.

Yemen Portal and Other Blocked Yemeni Websites to Sue

Filed under: Judicial, Media — by Jane Novak at 4:16 pm on Friday, June 27, 2008

Efforts to sue Yemeni government over website ban welcomed at GV Advocacy event in Budapest

Press release by Yemen Portal

Budapest – June 27, 2008

Efforts to challenge the ban of Yemeni websites at court were welcomed yesterday by many online community members participating in the Global Voices Advocacy Workshop held in Budapest, Hungary, under the theme “Online Free Speech: toward a global anti-censorship movement.” The one-day workshop was a prelude to the Global Voices Online Citizen Media Summit 2008, being held from 27 to 28 June and attended by more than 200 bloggers and online activists from around the world.

Walid Al-Saqaf, founder and administrator of YemenPortal.net, which is banned in Yemen, announced at the meeting that a number of blocked Yemeni websites have joined forces to lodge a lawsuit against the Ministry of Communication, in a bid to overturn the ban.

Al-Saqaf asked participants at the event for their support for the lawsuit, which is unprecedented in the region. Reacting to the participants’ positive response, he said: “I am truly grateful for the overwhelming support for our cause in achieving justice for Yemeni websites in their struggle with the Yemeni authorities.”

Dozens of news and opinion websites in Yemen have been banned without notice or warning by the country’s state-owned and dominant Internet Service Provider Yemen Net. The move to take a government to court for banning websites had no precedence in the Arab world, but may not be without risks. “We risk intimidation, harassment, and in fact losing the case due to a biased judiciary. Yet, it is a challenge worth taking as it will reflect this issue more prominently in the mainstream media and highlight our struggle for justice,” added Al-Saqaf.

(Read on …)

Eeba al-Khaiwani

Filed under: Yemen, Yemen-Journalists, photos/gifs — by Jane Novak at 11:37 pm on Thursday, June 26, 2008

This is a short interview with Abdulkarim al-Khaiwani’s little daughter, Eeba, via Hub. She says the thugs were pounding his head into the street and he motioned to her to go back inside.

I hope the regime takes advantage of the temporary lull in publicity to free al-Khaiwani before we have to go into phase two of the campaign.

Video Fox and Friends

Filed under: Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 1:12 am on Thursday, June 26, 2008

bucket hair,gah!

Yemen Arrests Some al-Qaeda

Filed under: Al-Qaeda, Yemen, arrests — by Jane Novak at 10:53 pm on Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Reuters, 6/25

SANAA (Reuters) – Yemeni security forces have arrested a suspected al Qaeda member along with four comrades in the east of the Arabian Peninsula country, the Interior Ministry said on Wednesday.It identified the man as Haitham bin Saad and said he was arrested in the Hadramout region, an Islamist stronghold. “Those arrested are in custody in a prison run by state security in Sayun district to be later moved to Sanaa,” a state-affiliated website (www.26sep.net) quoted the ministry as saying.

June 17

M&C:

Sana’a, Yemen – Yemeni police have broken up an al-Qaeda cell that has been plotting terrorist attacks against foreign interests and government facilities in the capital Sana’a, an online news outlet reported Tuesday.

Officers from the National Security Agency raided the cell and arrested all its members late on Monday, the RayNews web site said, without giving numbers of those arrested.

It said the group’s leader, Riydh al-Salehi, was among the arrested suspects. The report describes al-Salehi as a ‘leading member of al-Qaeda in Yemen.’

The authorities did not comment on the report.

Yemen’s Interior Ministry has said that security forces had arrested 11 suspected members of the al-Qaeda terrorist network in Sana’a late in May. It said the detained suspects gave information during questioning about acts of terror carried out by the network.

An al-Qaeda arm in Yemen has claimed responsibility for several mortar attacks in Sana’a in the past few months, including one that targeted a residential compound housing US citizens on April 6 and another against the US embassy on March 18.

On Sunday, Yemeni Vice President Abdu-Rabu Mansour Hadi said his country had expelled 16,000 suspected members of the al-Qaeda network since 2005 as part of its efforts to fight terrorism.

Hadi said the expelled suspects belonged to various nationalities and many of them were those known as the Arab Afghans.

Arab Afghans are Muslim Jihadi veterans from various Arab countries who had fought against the Soviet army in Afghanistan in the 1980s. Yemen received thousands of those militants after the war ended in 1989.

Hadi said the suspected militants were sent back to their home countries between 2005 and 2008. He did not name any of the countries.

After the September 11, 2001 attacks on New York and Washington, Yemen allied itself with the United States in the so-called war on terrorism and cracked down on armed groups affiliated with al-Qaeda.

Security forces have also rounded up hundreds of Arab Afghans and foreign students at unregistered religious schools across the Arabian Peninsula country.

Schools, they want to talk about the schools?

From May, foreign al-Qaeda:

AKI

Sanaa, 30 May (AKI) – Yemeni security authorities have identified 70 militants belonging to al-Qaeda or to Shia rebel factions loyal to insurgent leader Imam Abdul Malik al-Houthi, and will be arrested in the next few days, pan-Arab daily al-Hayat reported.

About 30 of the wanted militants are thought to be very dangerous, as they are reportedly followers of Osama Bin Laden.

Yemeni security officials quoted by the paper said they are confident that in the next few days the wanted militants will be arrested, due to vital information provided by 11 al-Qaeda militants who were arrested in capital Sanaa earlier this week.

According to al-Hayat , those arrested were directly involved in terror attacks in Sanaa during March and April and belonged to Jund al-Yemen, al-Qaeda’s branch in the country.

Among the arrested are six Saudi citizens, three Chadians and two Yemenis.

Jund al-Yemen claimed responsibility for the double car-bomb attack near the Italian embassy in Sanaa on 30 April.

Also on Thursday, government troops arrested rebel leader Fadl al-Houthi along with Ahmad Daghsan, another al-Houthi field commander.

The Shia rebels together with the revival of al-Qaeda cells in Yemen represent the most important security threats in the country and have led to the deaths of hundreds of Yemeni soldiers.

In the past, the authorities in Yemen have accused the Iranian government of financing the rebel movement led by al-Houthi.

Bombing the camp of the central security forces

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Who is insulting the judiciary – the guy who laughed in court or the judge who refuses to free him despite a court order?

Filed under: Media — by Jane Novak at 3:46 pm on Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Abdulkarim al-Khaiwani was sentenced to six years in jail for an article that wasn’t cheerful enough and “liable to undermine the morale of the military”. Comedian Fahd al-Qarni is still in a Yemeni jail for singing a song that was too funny. Actually the song is so funny that when the prosecutor played it at trial as evidence, the entire courtroom burst out laughing, resulting in another trial delay.

In today’s developments, journalist Mohammed al-Mokaleh, spent two months in jail for laughing during al-Khaiwani’s trial. This week he was found guilty at his own trial of “attacking and defaming the judicial system” and given a six month suspended sentence.

However, the original judge refuses to respect the sentence and al-Makaleh remains in jail for defaming the judiciary. Do we get the irony here? The judge who refuses to implement the ruling is the one “attacking and defaming” the judiciary, not the guy who laughed in court. Its a zoo; even the judges treat the judiciary as subordinate to the elite shadow government that operates on vengeance not justice.

According to information before The International Press Institute (IPI), on 15 June, a Yemeni prosecutor accused Al-Mokaleh of “attacking and defaming the judicial system,” for laughing out loud during the concluding moments of the trial of Abdelkarim Al-Khaiwani, former editor-in-chief of the Al-Shoura newspaper, in late April 2008. Al-Mokaleh, who is also the Secretary-General of the opposition Socialist Party, has been a vocal critic of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh and his policies….Despite efforts by an advisor to the President as well as several Yemeni members of parliament, the judge has refused to release Al-Mokaleh on bail

as required by the court.

Enviormental Disaster? No, Hot Air Mostly

Filed under: Enviornmental, Oil, Parliament, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 9:29 am on Wednesday, June 25, 2008

The numbers are all wrong, and the scenario espoused doesn’t fit the physical reality. There was an IED, not a pipe failure, and the amount spilled could never amount the the numbers presented in Parliament. If there’s 420,000 barrels of oil missing, its probably on a tanker, not in the ground.

al-Sahwa

Sahwa Net – A Yemeni parliamentarian, Abdul-Karim Jadban, accused on Tuesday the French company, Total, of wasting 420,000 barrels of oil worth 11 billion and 700 thousand Yemeni rials, affirming in the meantime, that the firm manipulated international standards of oil pipelines which, in part, led to leak amounts of oil in March 2008 and spoil environment.

On the other hand, Jadban further revealed that the UK firm Dove Energy had embezzled 11 billion and 423 million Yemeni rials, asking the Oil and Minerals Minister about the realities of referring the firm to a public fund court.

How do we go from 1000 barrels leaked to 420,000 barrels wasted, ’splain please.

SANA’A, NewsYemen

Member of the Parliament Abdul-Karim Jadban asked at the Parliament’s session on Tuesday the Minister of Oil and Minerals about 420,000 barrels of oil that he claimed wasted by the French TOTAL last March.

Jadban accused TOTAL of “playing with international specifications of oil pipelines that led to the explosion of a pipeline that has been linking block 10 to block 14 last March 14, 2008.”

Jadban said the explosion cost Yemen YR 11.7 billion and that the production stopped from March 27 to April 5, 2008. He added that a quantity of oil estimated at 1000 barrels leaked out and that “may destroy the environment.”

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