Al Qaeda still reaping oil profits in
Yemen despite battlefield reverses
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[May 27, 2016]
By Noah Browning, Jonathan Saul and Mohammed Ghobari
DUBAI/LONDON/CAIRO (Reuters) - Al Qaeda
may have been pushed out of the enclave it carved out in Yemen as the
country descended into civil war, but the militants are still entrenched
in other parts of the country's south, reaping profits from smuggled
fuel.
Scores of militants were killed in a Gulf Arab-backed offensive on
Al Qaeda's de facto capital of Mukalla, Yemen's third largest
seaport, but hundreds fled to neighboring Shabwa province and
beyond.
A month later, al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) is thriving
by joining diverse armed groups in taxing fuel delivered illicitly
to remote beaches along the Arabian Sea coast, security, tribal and
shipping sources say.
Home to Yemen's largest industrial project, a now-shut liquefied
natural gas export facility at Belhaf, Shabwa is divided among al
Qaeda, government troops loyal to President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi,
Houthi forces and armed tribes.
Tribal sources say all sides are benefiting at a time of extreme
fuel shortages around the country.
"There are five checkpoints in Shabwa between Bir Ali and Ataq
leading to the (Houthi-controlled) interior ... one by the army, one
by a tribal militia and one by the acting governor. Al Qaeda
maintains two at Azzan," a local tribal leader said.
General Faraj al-Buhsani, commander of the Yemeni forces which
routed AQAP in Mukalla, concurred.
"In Azzan (al Qaeda) has a hub for the trade in oil products coming
from Belhaf and that area in the direction of Shabwa which is
ongoing. We are hearing about this continuously."
Aid groups say Yemen in an average recent month brings in less than
10 percent of the more than 500,000 tonnes of fuel it needs, partly
because many Yemeni ports are subject to a Gulf Arab quasi-blockade
to prevent arms reaching the Houthis.
Director of the Shabwa governor's office, Muhsin al-Haj, defended
the province's role in the illegal trade when it is struggling to
maintain security with limited outside help.
"Shabwa is running on the most basic resources," he told Reuters.
"In a province of 42,000 sq km, we have just two security cars, and
they're not even armed."
A YEAR UNDER AQAP
Founded in the 1990s, AQAP's re-emergence is a striking unintended
consequence of the Saudi-led intervention in Yemen in March 2015,
prompted by gains made against the government by Houthi rebels
allied to Saudi's arch-enemy, Iran.
Before the military's April 24-25 offensive, the group enjoyed
relative prosperity along 600 km (373 miles) of Yemen's southern
coastline, raking in around $2 million every day mostly by taxing
goods entering Mukalla by ship, as documented in a Reuters
investigation in early April. The group also extorted $1.4 million
from the national oil company.
In its year of control, the militants gained the grudging acceptance
of many locals in the long-marginalized south by putting its
economic resources to work in development projects. Some residents
told Reuters they preferred the stability of al Qaeda's rule to
living in a war zone contested by armed groups.
For their part, the militants appeared to want to avoid dragging a
potentially sympathetic civilian population into a conflict when the
military attacked, and simply withdrew.
It was a change in tack for the group, which conducted a series of
attacks in Yemen, including on the now-abandoned U.S. embassy in
Sanaa, and claimed responsibility for the shootings at French
satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in January 2015.
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Fuel tanker trucks carrying smuggled petrol are seen on a road
linking Bir Ali with Ataq city, the provincial capital of Shabwa
province, Yemen, January 10, 2016. REUTERS/Stringer
Tribal sources say Al Qaeda militants have agreed not to obstruct
the lucrative smuggling trade and instead inserted themselves into
the illicit networks
"Al Qaeda takes its share of oil smuggling at the ports in Shabwa
through intermediaries and there is an agreement between them and
the tribes that the one won't stand in the way of the other," one
tribal source said.
SMALL CRAFT
Local officials and international shipping sources say the smuggling
is conducted through small craft, including wooden dhows, alighting
at fishing villages and hamlets.
One shipping source pointed to at least three small ships, which
included tankers, that were involved in fuel smuggling activity
around Bir Ali and surrounding areas since the government took over
Mukalla.
"There are a number of small harbors around that area that have
become possible conduits for illicit smuggling activity," said one
shipping source. "It usually involves very small ships that can
discharge their cargoes more easily given the smaller quantities
involved.
"The vessels make deviations from their normal navigational courses
and switch off their transponders close to the shorelines of these
areas."
Two separate trade sources familiar with trading movements in Yemen
also pointed to smuggling activity around those areas, involving
ships carrying small loads of around 1,000 tonnes of fuel oil or
diesel.
Yemeni military and coalition officials say that despite an apparent
pause, they are continuing to fight to destroy AQAP.
"Al Qaeda is taking losses in Yemen and will continue to do so,"
Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir told a press conference in
Berlin on Wednesday.
"There is no magic wand that one can wave that leads to the defeat
of al Qaeda. It takes time ... we are determined to wage this battle
until we defeat them."
Elisabeth Kendall, a Yemen scholar at Oxford University, said the
group's new tactics could make it harder to root out, however.
"They're always going to keep melting away and now that they have a
lot of money, they can buy their way into the population and reach
places the government can't and gain traction."
(Additional reporting by Noah Barkin in Berlin; Writing By Noah
Browning; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
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