Al-Qaeda says fighting alongside US-, Saudi-backed militia in Yemen
(last modified Mon, 01 May 2017 16:31:41 GMT )
May 01, 2017 16:31 UTC
  • Al-Qaeda says fighting alongside US-, Saudi-backed militia in Yemen

The leader of al-Qaeda's branch in Yemen says his forces have often fought alongside US- and Saudi-backed militia and supporters of former Yemeni president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi against the Yemeni army and the popular Ansarullah movement.

Qasim al-Rimi, the ringleader of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), made the remarks to the terrorist group's media arm al-Malahem from an undisclosed location in war-torn Yemen on Sunday, adding that his militants had teamed up with an array of other "factions," including Salafist groups and the "Muslim Brotherhood," who are both key militias on Hadi's side.

The AQAP is perceived as the most active branch of the al-Qaeda terrorist group and has been considered by the Pentagon as the most dangerous offshoot of the global terror network. Washington has already offered a $5million prize for al-Rimi's capture.

Since March 2015, Saudi Arabia has been heavily bombarding Yemen as part of a brutal campaign against its impoverished southern neighbor in an attempt to reinstall Hadi, a staunch ally of Riyadh, and crush the Houthis, who are in control of large parts of Yemen including the capital Sana'a.

The militia fighting for Hadi, who initially fled the country to Riyadh, managed to capture Aden in July 2015 with the military help of the Saudi regime after it fell to the Houthis in September 2014.

Since then, Hadi, along with his supporters and militiamen, has turned the port city into their base, calling it the country's temporary capital, and have gone hand-in-hand with the Saudi war machine against his own people. The brutal Saudi aggression has so far claimed the lives of more than 12,000 Yemenis.

The UN's high commissioner for human rights, Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein, warned on Monday that the world body was continuously receiving alarming signs that the so-called Saudi-led coalition could attack the key port city of Hudaydah, causing humanitarian suffering and loss of life.

"The UN is concerned about the humanitarian repercussions of such an attack in terms of inflaming the humanitarian crisis even further, let alone our concerns about loss of civilian life were there to be a large-scale attack on the port," he told a press conference in Geneva, Switzerland.

Late on March, the UN had also said that it was “extremely concerned” about a potential attack on the western port city. “We as the United Nations are advocating that no military operations should be undertaken in Hudaydah,” said UN Special Envoy for Yemen Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed at the time.

SS