ADEN: Tribesmen seized an oil ministry building in Yemen’s eastern Hadramout province yesterday and exchanged gunfire with a pro-government tribe seeking to regain control of the premises, tribal sources and ministry employees said.
The tribesmen were responding to the killing of a tribal leader earlier this month in fighting at an army checkpoint after his bodyguards refused to hand over their weapons to soldiers.
Yemen, one of the Arab world’s poorest countries, is struggling to restore state authority after long-serving President Ali Abdullah Saleh was forced to step down in 2011.
The authorities face regular challenges from tribesmen who have attacked oil pipelines and power lines for reasons including demands for the government to provide employment or efforts to secure the release of jailed relatives.
The sources said the building was under the control of Al Kathiry tribe who had told the oil ministry workers to leave. Details of casualties were not immediately available.
The tribesmen’s demands include the handing over of the soldiers who killed the leader, Said bin Habrish, full withdrawal of the army from Hadramout and more jobs for local people.
At least four people, including two soldiers, were killed in attacks on army checkpoints near oilfields in Wadi Hadramout on Monday, according to local sources.
Reuters