Brotherhood, Qaeda joining hands to control southern Yemen

The Muslim Brotherhood is proving to be a major stumbling block on the road to peace in Yemen.
The Islamist movement works tooth and
nail to control southern Yemen, which is resource-rich and enjoys a unique
geographical location.
They do this to compensate the losses
they sustained in the war in Yemen. The Muslim Brotherhood also backs Turkish
presence near the Bab el-Mandeb Strait and the southern entrance of the Red
Sea.
Muslim Brotherhood militias work hard to
sabotage the Riyadh Agreement by escalating their violence in southern Yemen.
Brotherhood-Qaeda alliance
Some Yemeni sources have disclosed the
presence of moves by al-Qaeda in Shabwah province.
Al-Qaeda, the sources said, make these
moves under protection from the Muslim Brotherhood militias.
Muslim Brotherhood checkpoints ease the
movement of the members of al-Qaeda in different districts in southern Yemen.
The same sources added that the
terrorists who carried out an attack in the south central town of Ahwar on 18 March
came from Shabwah.
Members of al-Qaeda launched an attack
on a security checkpoint of the Security Belt Forces in the northeastern part
of the southern province of Abyan.
The attack left a soldier dead and three
others injured.
The attack is the latest in a long
series of violations by the Muslim Brotherhood, ones aimed at sabotaging the
Riyadh Agreement.
Raising the alert level
The Transitional Southern Council asked
the troops affiliated to it to raise their alert level to sabotage possible
attacks by terrorist groups in southern Yemen.
It said in a statement that condemnation
is not enough to throw light on the enormity of the violations being committed
by terrorist groups in southern Yemen.