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MIDEAST: Another Jihad On the Rise By Nabil Sultan SANA'A, Jul 8 (IPS) - More than 200 people have been killed in clashes between Islamic
rebels and government forces using warplanes and tanks; this is not Iraq, but the
picture of new developments in Yemen.
Thousands of families are at risk as the clashes continue in the Marran mountains of
Saddah area. Saddah is about 150km north of capital Sana'a, and close to the border
with Saudi Arabia. It is the main centre of the Zaidi Shia sect founded about 1,000 years
ago.
The rebels have been chanting slogans against the United States and Israel, according to
local reports. Air attacks and tank assaults have not been successful so far in getting
rebel leader Hussein Badr al-Deen al-Hothy.
Al-Hothy, former member of Parliament for the al-Haq (Truth) party is now leading an
organization called 'Believing Youth'.
The government accuses al-Hothi of setting up a group modeled on the Lebanese
Hizbollah to re-establish monarchy in Yemen by force. He is also accused of preventing
people paying the Islamic tax Zakat to the government and of trying to set himself up as
Imam. Yemen has not had an imam since Zaidi Imam Hamid al-Din was overthrown as
ruler in 1962.
Al-Hothi has denied the accusations. He says 'Believing Youth' is being targeted because
of its faith in Islam and its opposition to the United States and Israel.
Yemeni officials say they have been keeping an eye on 'Believing Youth' for some time,
but had not believed the movement would become so significant.
"During the U.S. war on Iraq, al-Hothi's followers were in the front lines of
demonstrations," President Ali Abdallah Saleh said at a meeting with Islamic scholars
last weekend. "We did not consider that a problem, we said they are only a few
impetuous youths. But regrettably I have learnt that al-Hothi has formed the 'Believing
Youth' organisation."
President Saleh said al-Hothi has raised the Hizbollah flag instead of the national flag.
"This is against unity."
Leader of the Hizbollah in Lebanon Hassan Nasrallah denied any links with the rebels in
Saddah. "The Hizbollah policy is not to intervene in other countries' affairs," he said in a
statement.
The clashes in Saddah have set off political clashes between the government and the
opposition Islamic parties. The opposition has called on the government to stop
indiscriminate use of weapons and to open peaceful talks with the rebels.
The opposition has asked the President to lift the siege of several civilian areas in
Saddah. "This bloodshed, destruction of homes and assaults on people are truly
regrettable and a cause for sorrow," they said in a statement.
The ruling General People's Congress has threatened to take the opposition to court
over its stand.
The rebellion has created divisions also among Zaidi scholars. Some Zaidi Shia clerics
have dismissed the rebellion as only a "fitnah" (disturbance) among Yemeni Muslims.
Zaidi judge Ahmed al-Shami says the military action is only following a fatwa issued by
chairman of the Public Fatwa Authority Hamoud bin Abbas al-Moayyad.
These clerics say al-Hothi does not represent the views of the Zaidis, and that they
should reject his leadership. Others are supportive of al-Hothi.
Earlier this week the Yemeni government ordered closure of all unlicensed religious
schools. "Due to the connection between extremism, militancy and certain curricula that
promote deviant and alien ideologiesàthe Cabinet has issued orders for the immediate
closure of all schools and centres violating the education law," the cabinet said in a
statement.
The government integrated 140 religious schools run by Shias, Sunnis and Sufis with
government schools in 1999. But many have continued to work independently.
The order to close the schools reflects "strong foreign pressure on the government,"
political analyst Mohammed al-Sabri told IPS.
Citizen groups in Marran have meanwhile appealed to international and humanitarian
organisations to come urgently to the rescue of thousands of families threatened by the
siege. (END/2004) Send your comments to the editor
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