by Saeed al Batati
Conflict in Yemen might turn into an all-out sectarian war, analysts warn.
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Mourners bury 12 victims of car bombs aimed at Houthi-manned checkpoint [Nasser al-Sanie/Al Jazeera] | |
| Yemen - As fighting between Yemen's warring groups intensified, the recent clashes between Houthi fighters and al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) could turn into a wider sectarian conflict, according to analysts. 
On Saturday night clashes erupted between Houthi fighters and tribesmen in Arhab, a tribal area located 35km northeast of Sanaa and a bastion of Islah party supporters. Tribal  sources said many Houthi fighters were killed in this confrontation,  but there was no confirmation of the exact number of the dead. 
Earlier  this month, AQAP and tribal fighters attacked positions held by the  Houthi rebels in the Yakla mountains in Radaa district of al-Bayda which  left 14 Houthi fighters dead. 
On Thursday, hundreds of mourners buried the civilian victims of the latest round of violence in al-Bayda province, when, on December  16, a car bomb exploded near a checkpoint in Radaa manned by Houthi  rebels, killing 16 girls, nine of whom were from al-Bayda. Another car  bomb exploded on the same day, near the house of Abdallah Idriss, a  senior Houthi leader, killing 10 people. 
A local government official told Al Jazeera that relatives of victims seek justice and compensation. 
"Some  of the critically injured civilians are in need of urgent medical  treatment abroad, but people cannot afford to pay for this," Tareq Abu  Sorema, the director of Radaa's Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs,  told Al Jazeera at the funeral site. 
Shortly after Houthi rebels took over Sanaa,  and several neighbouring provinces, they quickly advanced into  al-Qaeda-controlled regions in al-Bayda, including Radaa city, where  they engaged in fierce fighting with forces backed by local Sunni  tribes. 
Last November, AQAP's military chief, Qassem al-Rimi, warned the  Houthis to brace "for horrors that will make the hair of children turn  white", after the Houthi fighters expanded their presence into AQAP's  stronghold of Radaa. 
On  Thursday, al-Bayda residents told Al Jazeera that al-Qaeda fighters and  tribesmen launched an attack that claimed the lives of scores of Houthi  fighters. 
"Al-Qaeda killed at least 20 people and injured many others. This is what tribesmen who fight Houthis told us," a resident said. 
Houthis,  on their part, declined to comment on the death toll while al-Qaeda  posted details of the attacks on affiliated Twitter accounts. 
AQAP sources also said that it gunned down Faisal al-Sharif, a pro-Houthi tribal leader in the Yemeni capital three days ago.  
 But it is precisely the Houthis' involvement in the "war on terror" which, analysts say, helps AQAP in getting more recruits. "The Houthis' sectarian nature has enabled al-Qaeda to portray its conflict against them as Shia targeting Sunnis," Saeed Obeid, a Yemeni analyst told Al Jazeera. 
Obeid  added that if the government remained weak, the current clashes between  al-Qaeda and Houthis could develop into all out sectarian warfare. "The  clashes are a recipe for wider war so long as the government is unable  to execute its duties." 
In  October, Houthis announced that they were driving al-Qaeda fighters out  of their strongholds in Manaseh, Qaifah and Khoubza regions in Bayda  province. The Houthis demanded hundreds of displaced families who fled  their homes during the clashes to return home. 
However,  despite the Houthis' quick and visible victories, Obeid thinks that  they do not maintain an upper hand in the battles against al-Qaeda. 
"Al-Qaeda's  strategy is to engage in a war of attrition with its opponents.  Al-Qaeda is striking all over Houthi-controlled areas. They detonated  bombs and gunned down Houthi-linked figures in Sanaa. They also mounted  deadly attacks on the Houthis in Bayda." | 
Saeed al Batati
Source: http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2014/12/yemen-al-qaeda-war-attrition-2014122863330683250.html
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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