S-Arabia says 109 Yemenis traded for 9 Saudis amid war
A military coalition led by Saudi Arabia that is fighting a
war with Yemen's Shiite rebels said that it has traded 109 Yemeni prisoners
taken during the fighting in the neighboring country for nine Saudis who were
held captive.
According to AP, it was the latest prisoner exchange ahead of a scheduled
April cease-fire and peace talks, coming just after tribal authorities and
Yemeni officials said suspected United States drone strikes killed least 10
suspected al-Qaida militants in the country.
A coalition statement carried by the state-run Saudi Press
Agency said the trade happened on Sunday, but it did not explain how the Saudis
ended up in custody in Yemen. It said the Yemenis held had been detained in
"areas of operations near the border of Saudi Arabia."
The exchange comes as the Saudi-led coalition and Yemeni
rebels, known as Houthis, have agreed to a cease-fire at midnight on April 10
ahead of peace talks starting April 18 in Kuwait. Earlier this month, another exchange
saw Saudi Arabia release seven Yemenis for one of its soldiers.
In its statement, the coalition said it hoped the tentative
calm now in Yemen would allow "aid to reach all Yemeni territories"
and would support United Nations' efforts to end the fighting.
In the chaos of Yemen's war, a powerful al-Qaida affiliate
has seized a large swath of territory across the country's south and east,
while an upstart Islamic State branch has carried out a series of attacks.
Tribesmen and security officials said that suspected U.S.
drone strikes late Saturday night into Sunday morning targeted an Al-Qaida in
the Arabian Peninsula camp in the Mahfad area of Yemen's southern Abyan
province. They said that at least 10 suspected al-Qaida militants were killed
and others were wounded in the strikes targeting "Wadi al-Dayqa," which
means "the Narrow Valley" in Arabic.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they
weren't authorized to publicly discuss details of the strike.
The al-Qaida affiliate said on Twitter later Sunday that
U.S. drones struck its fighters as they prepared to attack Houthis in Bayda to
free their compatriots.
The U.S., while pulling out advisers from Yemen as the civil
war there ramped up, has continued its drone strike program targeting its local
al-Qaida affiliate, which Washington believes to be the most-dangerous branch
of the terror organisation.
Mahfad has been a major site for training camps for al-Qaida
in Yemen. Last week, more than 40 suspected al-Qaida militants were killed in a
U.S. drone strike in the province of Hadramawt. In April 2014, another suspected
drone strike in Mahfad killed more than 50 suspected al-Qaida militants.
Meanwhile, several projectiles fired from Yemen landed in
Saudi Arabia late Sunday night, wounding eight people, the Saudi Press Agency
said.
Yemen's conflict pits the government, backed by the
Saudi-led coalition, against the Houthis, allied with a former president. The
Houthis took over the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, in September 2014, and the
U.S.-backed coalition began airstrikes against them in March 2015.
More than 6,000 people have been killed in fighting,
millions are displaced and the Arab world's poorest country has been pushed to
the brink of famine.
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