Houthis bury 15 fighters after clashes with government troops

Houthis bury 15 fighters after clashes with government troops
Armed Houthi followers ride on the back of a truck in Sanaa, Yemen. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 05 September 2023
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Houthis bury 15 fighters after clashes with government troops

Houthis bury 15 fighters after clashes with government troops
  • Yemeni military officials say that the actual number of Houthi casualties on the battlefield is significantly higher than the figure reported by the militia’s media

AL-MUKALLA: Iran-backed Houthis have this week arranged funerals in Sanaa and Saada for 15 fallen combatants as the Yemeni militia continues to attack government troops in Lahj, Marib, and Taiz.

Official Houthi media reported that at least 11 officers had been buried in the capital Sanaa since Saturday, while another four with varying military ranks had been laid to rest in the militia’s heartland of Saada, bringing the total number of killed fighters to more than 150 since the beginning of July.

The Houthis have launched deadly attacks on government-controlled areas in southern and central Yemen — killing dozens of government soldiers — despite the UN-brokered ceasefire which took effect in early 2022.

Yemeni military officials say that the actual number of Houthi casualties on the battlefield is significantly higher than the figure reported by the militia’s media, and that the Houthis have suffered massive losses.

Abdul Basit Al-Baher, a Yemeni military official in Taiz, told Arab News on Tuesday: “Our data demonstrates that the number of Houthi deaths reported by their media is a small fraction of the actual number of Houthi deaths, as there are masses of deceased fighters buried in villages and Yemeni cities not reported by Houthi media.”

He said the Houthis only recognized fatalities of Hashemite families or high-ranking military personnel, adding: “The Houthis do not acknowledge the deaths of many children who were recruited and killed in Houthi suicide attacks and buried in villages and cities.”

Meanwhile, Yemeni government forces have repelled two Houthi attacks on their positions on the eastern and western outskirts of the southern city of Taiz.

Al-Baher said army forces had thwarted attempts by the Houthis to seize control of new areas in Taiz, and that the Houthis had been mobilizing forces and assaulting government troops for months.

Rashad Al-Alimi, the chairman of Yemen’s Presidential Leadership Council, on Tuesday convened a meeting in the southern port city of Aden with the security and military committee tasked with unifying units under the Riyadh Agreement.

The official news agency reported that the Yemeni leader met committee members to discuss unifying the military and enhancing its capabilities to combat the Houthis and Al-Qaeda.


UAE president pardons Bangladesh citizens jailed for protesting

UAE president pardons Bangladesh citizens jailed for protesting
Updated 38 min 24 sec ago
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UAE president pardons Bangladesh citizens jailed for protesting

UAE president pardons Bangladesh citizens jailed for protesting

DUBAI: United Arab Emirates President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan has pardoned the Bangladeshi nationals who were convicted in July after staging a protest, UAE news agency WAM reported on Tuesday.

Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed “has ordered a pardon for the Bangladeshi nationals involved in last month’s protests and disturbances across several emirates,” the statement said. 

The decision includes cancelling the sentences of those convicted and arranging for their deportation.

The UAE attorney-general has issued an order to halt the implementation of the sentences and commence deportation procedures.

 The attorney-general also called on all residents of the UAE to respect the country’s laws, stressing that the right to express opinions is protected by the state and its legal framework.

 


UN hosts talks in Tripoli to resolve Libya’s central bank crisis

Libyan Ministry of Interior personnel stand guard in front of the Central Bank of Libya in Tripoli, Libya, August 27, 2024.
Libyan Ministry of Interior personnel stand guard in front of the Central Bank of Libya in Tripoli, Libya, August 27, 2024.
Updated 03 September 2024
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UN hosts talks in Tripoli to resolve Libya’s central bank crisis

Libyan Ministry of Interior personnel stand guard in front of the Central Bank of Libya in Tripoli, Libya, August 27, 2024.
  • The representatives agreed to submit a draft agreement to their respective chambers for review, with the goal of finalizing and signing the agreement on Tuesday

TRIPOLI: The United Nations Support Mission in Libya said it held talks in Tripoli on Monday to help resolve a central bank crisis that sparked a blockade of oil production and threatens the worst crisis in years for the major energy exporter.
The standoff was triggered when Western factions moved last month to oust veteran governor Sadiq Al-Kabir and replace him with a rival board, leading Eastern factions to shut down all oil production.
In its statement, UNSMIL said the consultations were concluded with ‘significant’ understanding and the two sides agreed to submit a draft agreement to their respective chambers for review, with the goal of finalizing and signing the agreement on Tuesday.
Oil prices edged higher on Monday, recovering some losses from late last week, as Libyan oil exports remained halted and concerns about higher OPEC+ production from October eased.
Representatives from Libya’s House of Representatives and High Council of State on one side and the Presidential Council on the other participated in the talks hosted by UNSMIL which lasted from morning until late into the night, the statement said.
Libya’s central bank (CBL) is the sole legal repository for Libyan oil revenues and it pays state salaries across the country. If those functions are compromised by the current crisis, Libyans will soon feel the pinch.
If the struggle for control is prolonged, all state salaries, transfers between banks and letters of credit needed for imports will become impossible, freezing up the economy and Libya’s international trade.
Eastern factions, including the House of Representatives (HoR) parliament led by speaker Aguila Saleh and the Libyan National Army (LNA) under commander Khalifa Haftar, oppose the Tripoli-based Presidency Council’s bid to oust CBL governor Al-Kabir.
The eastern side’s oil blockade will gradually starve the CBL of new funds, as well as reducing condensate available for power plants, meaning long electricity blackouts may soon return.
As a result of the oilfields closures, the state-owned National Oil Corporation (NOC) said total production had plunged to just over 591,000 bpd by Aug. 28 from nearly 959,000 bpd on Aug. 26, amounting to losses of over $120 million over the three days. Production was at about 1.28 million bpd on July 20, NOC said.
The crisis threatens to end a four-year period of relative peace in the OPEC member that for a decade has been split between eastern and western factions that have drawn backing from Russia and Turkiye, respectively.
As the state crumbled between rival factions, the CBL and National Oil Corporation (NOC), the state energy producer, were held off limits, ensuring some governmental functions continued.

 

 


Syria Kurds release 50 Daesh-linked detainees: official

Syria Kurds release 50 Daesh-linked detainees: official
Updated 03 September 2024
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Syria Kurds release 50 Daesh-linked detainees: official

Syria Kurds release 50 Daesh-linked detainees: official
  • The SDF, dominated by Kurds but also includes Arab fighters in its ranks, had already in the past released dozens of Syrians accused of being linked to Daesh from their prisons after obtaining guarantees from tribal leaders

HASAKAH, Syria: Syria’s Kurdish authorities on Monday released 50 Syrian prisoners accused of belonging to the Daesh terrorist group as part of a general amnesty deal, an official told AFP.
Thousands of detainees suspected of belonging to Daesh, including hundreds of foreigners, are being held in prisons run by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), the armed wing of the semi-autonomous Kurdish-led region in northeastern Syria.
The administration in July granted general amnesty “for crimes committed by Syrians in accordance with the law on combating terrorism as well as crimes that undermine the security of the region.”
Reber Kalo, an official with the Asayish security forces, told AFP that “under the amnesty, 50 people accused of belonging to the terrorist organization Daesh were released on Monday,” using the Arabic acronym for Daesh.
This is the second group to be released out of a total of the 1,000 to 1,500 people expected to benefit from the amnesty.
The amnesty deal, according to the official, only applies to “Syrians and does not include foreigners, and is limited to those whose hands are not stained with blood,” stressing that “no one who participated in the fighting will be released.”
“There will be other waves of releases in the coming months,” he said.
The general amnesty was decided on in response to the “recommendations of the meeting of Syrian tribes and components held on May 25,” reads a July statement from the administration.
An AFP photographer in the northeastern city of Hasakah saw the prisoners being handed over by Kurdish security forces to tribal leaders.
The SDF, dominated by Kurds but also includes Arab fighters in its ranks, had already in the past released dozens of Syrians accused of being linked to Daesh from their prisons after obtaining guarantees from tribal leaders.
Daesh seized control of large swathes of Syria in 2014, launching a reign of terror before being defeated in 2019 by a United States-led international coalition aided by the SDF.
Since then, the autonomous administration has been holding around 56,000 people, including 30,000 children, in 24 detention centers and two camps — Al-Hol and Roj — in northeastern Syria.
Among them are Daesh fighters and their families, as well as displaced people who fled the fighting.
 

 


Turkish military destroys 20 targets of Kurdish militant group PKK, ministry says

Turkish military destroys 20 targets of Kurdish militant group PKK, ministry says
Updated 02 September 2024
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Turkish military destroys 20 targets of Kurdish militant group PKK, ministry says

Turkish military destroys 20 targets of Kurdish militant group PKK, ministry says
  • The PKK is designated as a terrorist organization by Turkiye, the United States and the European Union

ISTANBUL: Turkiye carried out air strikes in northern Iraq on Monday and destroyed 20 targets of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), the Turkish Defense Ministry said in a statement, adding many militants had been “neutralized” in the attack.
The term “neutralized” when used in such expressions most often means “killed.”
The operations were conducted in northern Iraq’s PKK bases in Asos, Gara, Hakurk, Metina, Qandil and Zap, the statement said.
In a statement on X, the ministry said the targets included caves, shelters, bunkers, depots and facilities.
The PKK is designated as a terrorist organization by Turkiye, the United States and the European Union.

 


US CETNCOM, Syria’s SDF capture Daesh ‘facilitator’ Khaled Ahmed Al-Danal

US CETNCOM, Syria’s SDF capture Daesh ‘facilitator’ Khaled Ahmed Al-Danal
Updated 02 September 2024
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US CETNCOM, Syria’s SDF capture Daesh ‘facilitator’ Khaled Ahmed Al-Danal

US CETNCOM, Syria’s SDF capture Daesh ‘facilitator’ Khaled Ahmed Al-Danal

CAIRO: US Central Command (CENTCOM) said on Monday that it had captured Daesh “facilitator” Khaled Ahmed Al-Danal whom it said was “assessed to be aiding efforts of detained Daesh fighters” on Sept. 1, with support from Syria Democratic Forces (SDF).