SHIELD INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Posted on 10 September, 2018

GULF OF ADEN SECURITY REVIEW

 

Yemen Security Brief

President Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi’s delegation to the UN consultations in Geneva threatened to leave the consultations if the al Houthi delegation did not arrive by September 7. UN Special Envoy to Yemen Martin Griffiths announced on September 6 that there are no meetings related to the consultations scheduled for September 7. Griffiths met with the Hadi government delegation on September 7 despite his announcement. The al Houthi movement claimed the Saudi-led coalition reneged on an agreement to allow its delegation to travel and from the consultations and allow wounded civilians to be evacuated to Oman. Coalition officials denied this claim and accused the al Houthi movement of adding additional pre-conditions for the talks. The al Houthi delegation has not yet left Yemen and the Hadi government delegation is still in Geneva.

Emirati-backed Yemeni forces resumed an offensive on al Hudaydah port city on September 7. Emirati-backed forces attacked al Houthi forces along the coastal road in southern neighborhoods of the city. Emirati-backed forces are attempting to envelope the city by simultaneously advancing toward the Kilo 16 road, east of al Hudaydah city. Senior al Houthi commander Brigadier General Ali Saleh al Qabari died in the clashes, according to a member of the Emirati-backed forces. Emirati helicopters attacked al Houthi forces stationed in al Hudaydah’s naval college on September 5.

Democratic members of the U.S. House of Representatives announced a plan to introduce a resolution in early September to invoke the War Powers Resolution and withdraw U.S. support from the Saudi-led coalition. The September 6 announcement cited the high rate of civilian casualties from the coalition’s bombing campaign and referenced the August 9 airstrike that killed 40 children in northern Yemen. Representative Ro Khanna is leading the effort. Previous similar efforts have failed.

Al Houthi forces fired two Badr 1 ballistic missiles at Jizan airport in southern Saudi Arabia on September 6. Saudi-led coalition spokesperson Turki al Maliki stated Saudi air defense systems intercepted a missile en route to Jizan city on September 6.

 

Horn of Africa Security Brief

U.S.-backed Somali special forces raided the home of the first Somali President Aden Abdulle Osman Daar, popularly known as Aden Adde, while searching for militants in Janale town, Lower Shabelle region. Gunfire damaged the building. The Somali Federal Government later apologized to Aden Adde’s family. Aden Adde was the president of Somalia from 1960 to 1967. He died in 2007.

Ethiopian police ruled the July 26 death of Ethiopian engineer Simegnew Bekele a suicide on August 7. Police found Bekele dead from a gunshot wound in his parked car in Meskel Square, Addis Ababa on July 26. Police chief General Zeyinu Jamal reported that investigations will continue into the details of his death. Bekele was the head engineer and public face of the $4 billion Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD). The GERD will be Africa’s largest hydroelectric dam once completed, but its construction has caused concern for Egypt and raised regional tensions. Many Ethiopians believe Bekele was assassinated, and thousands of mourners protested during his funeral in Addis Ababa in July.

 

Source: CT

 

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