A bomb exploded and killed six soldiers who support a group that wants to break away from Yemen on Monday. A military spokesperson said it was the latest attack from al-Qaida militants in the poor Arab country.
The blast hit a military truck in a hilly area in the Modiyah district of southern Abyan province, as it was passing by. The information was provided by Mohamed al-Naqib, who is a spokesperson for the Southern Armed Forces, which is the military part of the secessionist Southern Transitional Council.
Eleven more soldiers got hurt, he said.
The council supported by the UAE has power over many areas in the southern part of Yemen. They don’t get along with the government that most countries accept, but they work together against the rebels in Yemen. The rebels are supported by Iran and they control the north and the capital Sanaa.
Al-Naqib said that AQAP was responsible for the attack.
AQAP is considered to be one of the most dangerous parts of the terror group. It’s been active for more than ten years since the founder, Osama bin Laden, was killed.
It is working in many parts of Yemen and taking advantage of the country’s civil war to make its position stronger in the nation at the bottom of the Arabian Peninsula.
Yemen’s destructive civil war started in 2014 when the Houthis took over the capital city of Sanaa and parts of northern Yemen. They also made the government leave the country.
Tag: tROOPS
-
Six troops in Yemen supporting a separatist faction killed by a suspected al-Qaida explosive
-
Ukraine: The troops who can’t move from front lines until conflict is resolved
For Ukrainian soldiers in one unit, life on the front line is very difficult. They only get 10 days off per year and there are many soldiers getting injured or killed.
Standing in a place with destroyed buildings, “Jimmy,” a Ukrainian soldier who has been serving in the military for a long time, thought about how he managed to stay alive. He said, “I’m fortunate. in my opinion, war can either protect or harm people. ”
His soldiers believe that the fact Jimmy is still with them, even though he has been injured several times, means he is very lucky.
His group, called the 24th Mechanised Brigade, has been around for a while and is a part of the older Ukrainian army. They have been fighting against the Russians since 2014. However, after the attack in February 2022, the army has grown more than three times its original size, the country has responded by mobilizing, and Jimmy’s unit has completely transformed.
We were in the Donbas, an area in the east known for its old factories, for two weeks in August. The 24th, which now serves there, is stationed between Bakhmut and Horlivka.
We visited the hometown in western Ukraine where the brigade stayed before the war and where lots of their families still live.
Jimmy leads a group of soldiers in the Ukrainian army. The army prefers we call soldiers by their nicknames instead of their real names. Jimmy took on this role as company leader last year. The company usually consists of around 120 soldiers. A police officer told me that none of the 15 leaders in charge of the company at the beginning of the war are still there. They have either been promoted or injured.
Before the war began, the 24th Brigade had slightly more than 2,000 soldiers. They would send their three battalions to the front line in eastern Ukraine for short periods of time. The Ukrainian army has grown to over 7,000 people, including five groups of soldiers, four groups of artillery, one group of tanks, and many other support units.
As more people were called to join the military force, both the experienced soldiers and many new recruits came together. Yurii is a young venture capitalist from Kyiv who is very talented.
At first, Yurii was given a rifle and sent to the infantry. But a few months later, he was moved to a new military team called the “start-up” in the 24th Brigade. This team specialized in flying strike drones. He sat at a table in a children’s playground and showed us new drones. These drones can carry explosives and be flown into vehicles, buildings, or bunkers where the Russians hide.
Yurii said that at first, his mother didn’t believe him when he wanted to join the military. However, when she saw him successfully guiding drones into the enemy’s trenches, she changed her opinion and became proud of him.
For now, they can take only 10 days off each year.
Yurii is different compared to the other men in the 24th. He makes £2,600 ($3,195) per month, with 80% of it being combat pay. However, his earnings from being a civilian are higher.
Yurii, who has a beard and is good at selling business plans, explained to me that our company needs to be more creative than the Russians because they have a lot more drones than us.
One of the officers said that even though Yurii has a lower rank as a private soldier, he is basically in charge of this unit. The pre-2022 army had a different hierarchy compared to the force currently fighting the Russians.
Another reason is that they are now willing to ignore age and other things that used to prevent people from volunteering before 2022. We encountered a sergeant named “Hryb” (which means mushroom) who was given responsibility for a self-moving big gun.
He is an older man, specifically 52 years old, who served in the army over 30 years ago. What does he understand or have knowledge about modern warfare.
The 152mm Akatsiya howitzers used by the 24th Brigade are very old. They are the same type that Hryb used in the Soviet Army in East Germany in the early 1990s.
The shells that we saw them shooting were made 40 years ago, and the crew has given the nickname Babushka or Grandma to the howitzer. Who else would know her old quirks better than Grandpa Hryb.
His family was not happy with his choice to volunteer. Hryb said that they were crying quietly. “They promised to wait for me and told me that they had feelings of love for me. ”
Many Ukrainian families are still facing difficulties and uncertainty as the war continues without any signs of ending.
At a place in Lviv where injured soldiers go to recover, I talked about how some soldiers, who weren’t hurt as badly, find it hard to tell their wives that they want to go back to the battlefront.Pavlo, one of the patients, told me that a lot of boys, who were still alive but had lost a body part, also lost their families.
The man sadly says that this discussion has also happened in his marriage: “My wife believes I have fulfilled my responsibilities. ” Another man, who got hurt in a minefield during the recent counter-attack, tells me that Ukrainian society hasn’t fully realized how many injured people there are now.
The number of people who have died, gotten injured, or been taken captive might be discouraging others from volunteering. Ukraine does not share official numbers on recruitment.
Where do Ukraine’s soldiers with missing limbs go to rebuild their lives.
American voters: ‘I definitely want Ukraine to win, but. ‘
During the conflict between Ukraine and Russia, maps have been used to monitor the progress of the war.
But, many of the men we filmed who were being trained at Yavoriv and a range near the front were in their 40s, and some were in their 50s. The police officers informed us that there is strong competition among different groups to recruit younger people.
In August, it was found out that many men were paying money or secretly leaving the country to avoid being called up for service. This happened after the officers responsible for the call-up were fired.
Many people who have become unemployed due to the economic crisis and are drawn by the high salary, willingly choose to go to the front line as volunteers.
In the summer, there were efforts to fight back against Russia and free the occupied lands. The Pentagon had high expectations for the Ukrainian military, but the veterans in the 24th Brigade had lower expectations.
“Jimmy said it’s impossible to make a simple and easy breakthrough. ” “We are preparing for a lengthy battle. ”
Another officer from the brigade, who leads one of its battalions, compared the conflict to the Vietnam War, suggesting that it might go on for a long time.
And as the battle continues, the defeat also continues. In Ukraine, it is not allowed to reveal the number of casualties because it is a very sensitive topic. The Pentagon recently said that about 70,000 Ukrainians have died in the war, most of them being soldiers.
Based on our study of social media and old news stories, it seems likely that around 400 people from the 24th Brigade have been lost. Around 120 of these individuals passed away during the conflicts from 2014 until the beginning of 2022, with the rest dying after the Russian incursion.
It has also caught many men, which is a problem for the authorities because they can’t make large-scale exchanges of prisoners.
The wife of a soldier who was captured during a war informed us that only 22 men from the 24th Brigade had come back until now. She also mentioned that all the government departments she contacted gave her the same response, which was to be patient and wait.
When the war ends, there will be many things to discuss and agree upon, including the return of prisoners of war to their home countries. However, the negative consequences and anger from the public over Russia’s actions have made it very difficult for Ukrainian politicians to come to an agreement for a ceasefire or peace agreement that seems like a messy compromise.
We went to a cemetery near Lviv with Natalia Nezhura. She put new flowers on her brother Andrii’s grave. “She said she did everything she could to prevent him from going to the dangerous area. ”
She starts crying as she tells me about how she feels like a failure because she wasn’t able to do it.
She kept Andrii’s call-up papers a secret. When that didn’t work, she used a connection to get him a job as a firearms instructor at the Yavoriv training ground. However, in the end, most of the boys were sent to fight on the front line.
Andrii died earlier this year during the fighting in Bakhmut, while serving in the 24th Brigade. We had a talk near the waving flags of different groups in the military area in Lviv. There were over 2,000 graves in that place.
People who think that experiencing loss and pain would make them want peace will be surprised. When I asked Natalia how she thinks the war should end, she said she wants all Russians to die because she really hates them. She asked how we can talk about peace when they have killed a lot of our people.
For many years, the experienced army kept a fragile peace and sometimes there were small fights near the border with the Russians. However, now everyone is involved in the conflict, and the way the soldiers and families of the 24th Brigade think shows how much the whole society is supporting the war. Only a definite win is seen as acceptable by Ukrainians. -
Assembly of Burkina Faso approves sending troops to Niger
The lawmakers in Burkina Faso have agreed to send their soldiers to Niger, which is the country next to them. The military in Niger took control on July 26th.
The Defence Minister, Col Maj Kassoum Coulibaly, said on State TV that the soldiers will stay in Niger for three months, with the possibility of extending their stay. Their purpose is to fight against terrorism and help bring stability to the Sahel region.
Burkina Faso’s temporary government on August 30th agreed to send soldiers to Niger because they are expecting a military operation led by the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas).
Burkina Faso and Mali are supporting Niger’s military leaders. The leaders are being pressured by Ecowas to bring back the elected government or face more punishments and possible military action from neighboring countries.
Burkina Faso, Niger, and Mali have agreed to work together to address shared problems like a jihadist uprising, general insecurity, and lack of development. They will establish a joint organization to coordinate their efforts. -
Russia troop deaths hit 20,000 in 5 months – US
The US believes that since December, fighting in Ukraine has claimed the lives of around 20,000 Russian servicemen.
A further 80,000 have been wounded, National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said, citing newly declassified intelligence.
Half of the dead are from the Wagner mercenary company, who have been attacking the eastern Bakhmut city.
Russia has been trying to take the small city since last year in a grinding war of attrition.
Moscow currently holds most of Bakhmut, but Ukrainian troops are still control a small portion of the city in the west. The fierce battle has taken on huge symbolic importance for both sides.
Ukrainian officials have also said they are using the battle to kill as many of Russia’s troops as possible and wear down its reserves.
“Russia’s attempt at an offensive in the Donbas [region] largely through Bakhmut has failed,” Mr Kirby told reporters. “Russia has been unable to seize any real strategic and significant territory.
“We estimate that Russia has suffered more than 100,000 casualties, including over 20,000 killed in action,” he added.
The toll in Bakhmut accounts for losses since the start of December, according to the US figures.
“The bottom line is that Russia’s attempted offensive has backfired after months of fighting and extraordinary losses,” Mr Kirby said.
He added he was not giving estimates of Ukrainian casualties because “they are the victims here. Russia is the aggressor”.
The BBC is unable to independently verify the figures given and Moscow has not commented.
Image caption,A local resident pushes his bicycle down a street in Bakhmut in January The capture of the city would bring Russia slightly closer to its goal of controlling the whole of Donetsk region, one of four regions in eastern and southern Ukraine annexed by Russia last September following referendums widely condemned outside Russia as a sham.
Analysts say Bakhmut has little strategic value, but has become a focal point for Russian commanders, who have struggled to deliver any positive news to the Kremlin.
The Wagner mercenary group – which widely uses convicts and has become notorious for its often inhumane methods – has taken centre stage in the Russian assault on Bakhmut.
Its leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin, has staked his reputation, and that of his private army, on seizing the city.
But he recently threatened to pull his troops out of Bakhmut.
In a rare in-depth interview to a prominent Russian war blogger, he vowed to withdraw Wagner fighters if they were not provided with much-needed ammunition by the Russian defence ministry.
Wagner fighters could be redeployed to Mali, he warned.
He has often clashed with Russia’s defence ministry during the war, accusing officials of not providing his fighters with enough support.
Mr Prigozhin also called upon the Russian media and military leadership to “stop lying to the Russian population” ahead of an expected Ukrainian spring counteroffensive.
“We need to stop lying to the Russian population, telling them everything is all right,” he said.
He praised the Ukrainian military’s “good, correct military operations” and command.
A top Ukrainian general said on Monday that counterattacks had ousted Russian forces from some positions in Bakhmut, but the situation remained “difficult”.
New Russian units, including paratroopers and fighters from Wagner, are being “constantly thrown into battle” despite taking heavy losses, Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi, the commander of Ukraine’s ground forces, said on Telegram.
“But the enemy is unable to take control of the city,” he said.
-
Niger to receive troops from Germany
The sending of troops to Niger has received approval from the German parliament.
A tiny EU mission that was established in December with the goal of assisting the nation in improving its logistics and infrastructure would include 60 German soldiers.
The decision by parliament in Berlin reinforces the continued commitment to a German presence in the Sahel region despite the recent withdrawal from Mali.
Niger is one of the world’s poorest countries and faces the growing threat of violence spilling over from neighbouring Mali where Islamist militants have been gaining ground following the withdrawal of French and other European forces.