Suspected al Qaeda militants execute 17 soldiers in Yemen

Soldiers were travelling from southern port of Aden to al-Mahra province

Heavily-damaged buildings on a street in Yemen’s third city Taez as a result of clashes between Shiite Huthi rebels and fighters from the Popular Resistance Committees, loyal to Yemen’s fugitive president Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
Heavily-damaged buildings on a street in Yemen’s third city Taez as a result of clashes between Shiite Huthi rebels and fighters from the Popular Resistance Committees, loyal to Yemen’s fugitive president Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

Suspected al Qaeda militants in southern Yemen seized and executed 17 soldiers loyal to President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi on Saturday, according to local officials and residents.

The soldiers were detained while travelling from the southern port of Aden to al-Mahra province in eastern Yemen via Ahwar, a city in Abyan province under al Qaeda control.

The militants took them to a remote area and killed them by firing squad, the officials and residents said. They said 17 other captive soldiers were wounded in the incident and some managed to escape and get help from local tribal leaders.

Ansar al Sharia, an al Qaeda affiliate in Yemen, later issued a statement denying responsibility for the attack and blamed a local armed fighter named Ali Aqeel.

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“We entered Ahwar around two months ago to chase this corrupt individual and his gang,” the statement said.

The soldiers had been visiting family in Aden and were returning to their base in al-Mahra to draw their salaries, security sources said. They were not dressed in military uniform and were not riding in military vehicles.

Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) has exploited the Yemeni war to expand areas under its control, seizing Mukalla, the capital of Hadramout province, last year and recruiting more followers.

The Saudi-led military intervention in Yemen, backed by the United States, has helped AQAP become stronger than at any time since it first emerged almost 20 years ago, a Reuters special report revealed last week.

Iran-allied Houthi forces have been battling forces loyal to Yemen’s Saudi-backed President Hadi since March 2015 in a conflict that has cost more than 6,200 lives.

Meanwhile, US secretary of state John Kerry has made a brief stop in Afghanistan to promote co-operation from a would-be unity government that has proved largely incapable of running the country less than two years after he worked to install it.

For America’s leading diplomat, it was the second visit in as many days to a country the US long has wished to stabilise.

On Friday in Baghdad, he backed efforts by Iraq’s prime minister to settle a political crisis and stressed the importance of having a “unified and functioning government” to confront Islamic State.

In Kabul, Mr Kerry scheduled a joint meeting with Afghan president Ashraf Ghani and his rival, chief executive Abdullah Abdullah, and later planned to see each leader separately. Mr Kerry is expected to participate in talks on security, governance and economic development.

Afghanistan remains largely lawless, is rife with corruption and struggling to check the Taliban’s stubborn insurgency.

“We need to make certain that the government of national unity is doing everything possible to be unified and to deliver to the people of Afghanistan,” he told foreign minister Salahuddin Rabbani and other officials. Mr Kerry said he would tell Mr Ghani and Mr Abdullah to drop their “factional divisions”.