6 Yemeni Soldiers Killed in Fighting 
		Against Al-Qaeda Fighters
May 9, 
		2014
		 
		6 soldiers killed in ambush by militants in Yemen
		English.news.cn   
		2014-05-09 20:11:36
		
		
		
		
		ADEN, Yemen, May 9, 2014 (Xinhua) -- 
		Six Yemeni soldiers were killed and three others wounded when armed 
		men ambushed government troops in Yemen's southeastern province of al-Bayda 
		on Friday, a military official told Xinhua.
		"Government troops of the 26th Armored Brigade were on their way to 
		provide reinforcement to a military checkpoint in central al-Bayda 
		province when their convoy was waylaid and ambushed by suspected 
		al-Qaida attackers in the region," the local military official said, 
		requesting anonymity.
		He said a firefight erupted between the militants and the government 
		soldiers and lasted for about an hour, leaving about six soldiers killed 
		and three others injured on the spot.
		A provincial security officer said the incident could be considered 
		as a "retaliatory action" by the al-Qaida gunmen against the army forces 
		who have been conducting intensified military operations against their 
		hideouts in the south.
		The Yemeni armed forces backed by mechanized battalions, air force 
		and special forces have killed, wounded and captured dozens of local and 
		foreign suspected al-Qaida militants during the offensive that started 
		two weeks ago.
		The bodies of suspected foreign fighters from Algeria, Saudi Arabia, 
		Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Somalia, Russia's Chechnya and other nations 
		have been discovered among the dead, local authorities said.
		Commanders of the Yemen-based al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula 
		(AQAP) have vowed to hit back.
		Territories in Azzan and Mahfad, two of AQAP's main strongholds, have 
		also been recaptured by the army troops.
		The AQAP, known locally as Ansar al-Sharia, emerged in January 2009. 
		It is considered the most strategic threat to the Yemeni government and 
		neighboring oil-rich Saudi Arabia.
		Editor: xuxin 
		
		Tribal groups attempt to broker peace in Abyan, Shabwa
		Yemen Times, 8 May 2014 
		Ali Saeed (author),
		 Ali Ibrahim Al-Moshki (author)
		
		
Tribal sheikhs in Abyan and Shabwa say they want to mediate 
		between the army and militants. The army says it will not negotiate 
		with Al-Qaeda and will eliminate them "at any cost".
SANA'A, May 
		6—Separate tribal groups are attempting to broker peace between the 
		military and alleged Al-Qaeda militants in Abyan and Shabwa governorates 
		after a week of fighting. 
Tribal sheikhs from the Bakazim tribe 
		in Abyan governorate told the Yemen Times on Tuesday that they are 
		seeking to mediate between the army and Al-Qaeda militants to bring an 
		end to the fighting. 
The tribe is located in the Al-Mahfad 
		district, which has been the scene of heavy fighting over the last few 
		days. The tribe says it is seeking to avoid further civilian deaths and 
		wants the military to evacuate the area. 
The Defense Ministry's 
		news site on Tuesday quoted an anonymous military source who said that 
		the security forces would not negotiate with Al-Qaeda under any 
		circumstances. 
"There is no choice for Yemen but to eliminate 
		terrorists from the country,” the source said. 
Saleh Al-Kazimi, 
		a tribal sheikh from Al-Mahfad, told the Yemen Times that the tribe held 
		a meeting on Monday and agreed to offer itself as a mediator between the 
		army and Al-Qaeda. 
“Although we support the army in its fight 
		against Al-Qaeda militants, we want to stop this war because it will 
		destroy the district. We want to avoid the destruction,” said Al-Kazimi.
		
“Some Al-Qaeda militants belong to Al-Mahfad district. We want them 
		to hand over their weapons, repent, and to live their lives like other 
		citizens. We, the sheikhs, decided to force our tribesmen who are 
		engaged in the fighting to give up their weapons. We have assured them 
		that they will not be killed or handed over to the government,” Al-Kazimi 
		added. 
During the meeting it was decided that ten sheikhs would 
		negotiate with other tribal leaders who are lending support to Al-Qaeda, 
		while four other sheikhs have been assigned to negotiate with the 
		leadership of the Fourth Military Region as a precursor to mediation 
		efforts, Al-Kazimi said. 
A high-ranking officer from the Fourth 
		Military Region told the Yemen Times that the force has not yet met with 
		the sheikhs but that they would reject mediation efforts.
		Residents voiced varying  views on the possibility of mediation. 
		Some expressed concern that mediation would give militants an 
		opportunity to re-group in a different area. 
In Shabwa 
		governorate, which neighbors Abyan, local tribal leaders on Tuesday 
		evening agreed on a peace plan that would suspend confrontations in the 
		area, Sheikh Hamid Al-Karibi, a prominent local leader in Shabwa, told 
		the Yemen Times.
The plan would see local tribesmen helping 
		security forces deploy in the Maifa district of Shabwa, while Al-Qaeda 
		militants in the district would cease attacks on the military, surrender 
		their heavier weapons, and turn in foreign fighters, according to Al-Karibi.
		
Armed forces in Shabwa could not be reached for comment on the 
		proposed agreement. 
Saeed Ubaid Al-Jimhi, chairman of the Al-Jemhi 
		Studies Center that has conducted research on Al-Qaeda in Yemen, told 
		the Yemen Times that "tribes in the war zone are affected negatively by 
		the fighting in their areas and that is why they [tribesmen] propose 
		mediation."
"They want Al-Qaeda militants out of their areas," he 
		said.
He doubted that Al-Qaeda would turn in its foreign fighters 
		to the Yemeni army or hand over weapons.
The army entered Jawl 
		Raida city, the capital of Maifa district, on Wednesday morning,  
		according to Salim Al-Sayel, a journalist in Shabwa.
The 
		situation has been relatively calm since Tuesday evening  after a 
		week of clashes between the army and the militants, said one soldier who 
		is taking part in the fighting in Shabwa.
The solider told the 
		Yemen Times that 13 troops were killed in an ambush late last week. 
		
"We do not know how many militants were killed because when they 
		attack us, we fire back and they flee," said the soldier, who requested 
		anonymity because he is not allowed to speak to the press.  
		Civilians in Jawl Raida and areas near the conflict zone have already 
		fled their homes to Ataq city, Al-Sayel said.
Shabwa Alhdath, a 
		local news website, on Sunday quoted Heilf Al-Fadhool of the Rights and 
		Freedoms group, a Yemeni NGO, as saying "the army and the armed groups 
		in some areas [of Shabwa] use citizens as human shields and they 
		[citizens] are vulnerable to blockade and displacement."
"The 
		army must exercise the maximum level of caution when civilians are in a 
		war zone," the organization stressed. 
According to Al-Sayel, the 
		conflict has resulted in food shortages and massive price hikes.
		Fahd Ahmed Ali, a soldier in the Fourth Military Region which is 
		operating in Abyan, said General Mahmoud Al-Subaihi, the commander of 
		the sector, gave Al-Qaeda militants a 48-hour grace period commencing on 
		Monday evening to hand over their weapons. According to Ali, the general 
		warned that the military would enter the Dhaiqa valley, where some 
		militants have stationed themselves, if the order was not complied with. 
		 
On Wednesday, the state-run Saba new agency reported that the 
		army had entered Dhaiqa valley. 
The Defense Ministry also said 
		Al-Qaeda militants blew-up a government compound in Al-Mahfad on 
		Tuesday. The Yemen Times could not independently verify the claim. 
		
The military, along with the Popular Committees, began the offensive 
		on militants in Abyan and Shabwa on April 29. The fighting has left 
		thousands displaced and scores dead on both sides.