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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, August 28, 2015
UAE paid ransom to Yemeni tribesmen to free British hostage
The UAE was not engaged in any military operation to free British hostage in Yemen, Aden-based source tells Middle East Eye
Al-Qaeda militants posing in the Yemeni city of Seiyun in Hadramawt province on 21 May 2014 (AFP)
The UAE was not engaged in any military operation to free British hostage in Yemen, Aden-based source tells Middle East Eye
The United Arab Emirates paid a ransom to Yemeni tribesmen to free a
British held hostage, according to a source close to exiled president
Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi.
The UAE said that
on 23 August they launched a military operation to rescue 64-year-old
oil worker Douglas Semple from the grips of al-Qaeda in the Arabian
Peninsula (AQAP).
Semple was kidnapped at gunpoint in Yemen's eastern province of
Hadramawt in February 2014 and was held captive until his return to the
UK this week.
An Aden-based source told Middle East Eye on condition of anonymity that
AQAP was not holding Semple hostage and that it was local tribesmen who
were detaining the Briton.
The source said that the UAE did not rescue Semple through a military
operation but had in fact paid a ransom to the tribesmen for his
release.
The source did not reveal the amount paid by the UAE in ransom, however,
a prominent Gulf commentator has on Twitter claimed that it was $25mn.
Reports that #UAE paid $25 million ransom to #AQAP 2 secure release of British hostage @BBCWorld @Reuters @cnnbrk @CENTCOM @CNNSitRoom
AQAP on Wednesday released a statement claiming
that they had not been holding Semple hostage and accused the UAE of
lying in their tale of having rescued the Briton from their clutches in
Hadramawt.
Abu Dhabi has not commented on the AQAP claim, or reports that it paid a
ransom for Semple's release, and on Thursday their embassy in London
did not return calls for a statement.
The UAE has sought to keep its ground troops' participation in the
Saudi-led military operation in Yemen low key, as the move appears to
be unpopular in the Gulf state, especially following the death of a number of Emirati soldiers.
The UAE's participation in the Saudi-led offensive also appears to be in contrast to
the Emirates' cosy ties until recently to Yemen's former president, Ali
Abdullah Saleh, who is currently the chief ally of the Houthi
militiamen.
