Yemen Shi’ite rebels freed 178 government soldiers and civilians on Wednesday, a day after Sanaa accused them of dragging their feet over implementation of a truce deal to end a northern war, Al Arabiya reported.

Yemen Shi'ite rebels free 178 soldiers, civilians

A top Yemeni security body had said on Tuesday that the northern rebels were not fully complying with a deal struck in February to end a conflict that has raged on and off since 2004 and drew in neighbouring oil exporter Saudi Arabia last year.

The prisoners were handed over in the northern province of Saada that was the scene of most of the fighting, and they would be transported to Sanaa tomorrow, Al Arabiya quoted officials in a mediation committee as saying.

Sanaa, struggling to stabilise a fractious country, came under heavy pressure to end the northern war to focus on fighting al Qaeda after the group’s Yemen-based arm claimed responsibility for a failed December attack on a US-bound plane.

Western governments and neighbouring Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter, fear al Qaeda is exploiting instability on many fronts in Yemen to recruit and train militants for attacks in the region and beyond.

Analysts say the truce agreement between the government and rebels, who belong to the minority Zaydi sect of Shi’ite Islam, was unlikely to last as it does not address the insurgents’ complaints of discrimination by Sanaa.

DD News