Nature, it is said, abhors a vacuum. Looking at Yemen right now, where infighting among the countryβs anti-Houthi forces reached the strategic port of Mukalla at the weekend, it is clear that the withdrawal of UAE counterterrorism teams has created the kind of space in which extremists and rogue militias could regroup in an already-fragmented country.
Experts have told The National that Yemen needs a new counter-terrorism strategy to tackle the growing threat from Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and the Muslim Brotherhood following the abrupt departure of experienced UAE operatives. AQAP, one of the regionβs deadliest international terror groups, has long exploited deficient governance and internal divisions in Yemen to carry out attacks and expand.
Their violence runs in parallel with the destabilising and coercive rule of the Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemenβs north. There the militants oversee a warlike, impoverished and paranoid regime in which not even UN staff and aid workers are safe from arbitrary arrest. Although Houthi attacks on Red Sea shipping have largely abated and the group has lost senior leaders to Israeli and US air strikes, the rebels still have the means to strongarm the international community by disrupting maritime trade.
Who benefits from the situation in divided Yemen? 01:23
But the consequences of Yemen sliding further into chaos are not confined to the country alone. Wolf-Christian Paes, a Yemen expert at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, recently told The National that the security environment is deteriorating further, with troubling reports emerging about extremist activity β including militants from nearby Somalia. βThere are allegations about Al Shabab training camps in Yemen now,β he said. βThe plot is thickening.β
For the sake of Yemenβs long-suffering people, this plot needs to change. It has been welcome, therefore, to see Yemen's Southern Transitional Council β the largest group in the countryβs south β on Saturday welcoming a Saudi announcement
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