Southern Abyan Offensive (2016) | |||||||
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Part of the Yemeni Civil War (2015–present) | |||||||
The territory that AQAP seized during the offensive showed in dark grey, surrounded by black lines. |
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Belligerents | |||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Abu Hamza al-Zinjibari † Tawfiq Belaidi |
Sheikh Mazen al-Aqrabi † (Popular resistance unit senior commander) | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
Unknown | Unknown | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
Unknown | 3 killed, 3 captured 35-37 soldiers captured in the aftermath, 17-20 of them executed |
AQAP victory
The Southern Abyan Offensive reference to the 2016 offensive that AQAP launched in late February, and ends with the victory of AQAP, as Yemeni tribal fighters loyal to president Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi, driven out of the Abyan Governorate.
The AQAP was beginning to take parts of other remaining areas of southern Abyan from the beginning of February, when they entered Ahwar and other towns. The major offensive began in the dawn of the 20 February, with the AQAP first taking Ahwar, then Shuqrah, in one day fighting, that resulted to the death of 3 Hadi government loyalists. Also in the same day, AQAP attacked the new base of the Hadi government in the port city of Aden, killing one tribal leader and one of his bodyguards. After the tribal fighters abandoned the southern Abyan, and headed for the north, AQAP set up their flags in the government building, establishing a sharia court, and an Emirate, that is led by Tawfiq Belaidi, the brother of Abu Hamza al-Zinjibari, who was killed in a U.S drone strike on 3 February.
Southern Abyan is located in a region with very much strategically importance for AQAP, because of its geographical connection with the coastal city of Mukalla, the headquarters of AQAP. Mukalla was seized by the AQAP in summer of 2015, the first major victory of AQAP since the beginning of the war.
In 8 April 2016, more than 35 Hadi Yemeni government soldiers were captured by AQAP soldiers in Ahwar. 17 or more than 20 of them were executed by firing squad, with the others being wounded but still alive, and with others believed to have escaped and get to safety out of Ahwar. The soldiers were travelling from Aden to Al Mahrah Governorate via Ahwar, and during hair passing in Ahwar they have been ambushed. One day later, in 9 April, AQAP denied that its fighters executed the soldiers, blaming a local armed fighter named Ali Aqeel. "We entered Ahwar around two months ago to chase this corrupt individual and his gang," the statement said.