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Yemenis battle for mosques in Sunni-Shia divide

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Yemenis battle for mosques in Sunni-Shia divide
By AFP Published: July 22, 2013
DUBAI: Sunni and Shia Zaidi rebels in Yemen are waging a battle for the control of mosques, in a spillover of the sectarian face-off rattling the Middle East.
The showdown was previously confined to the northern province of Saada, stronghold of Zaidi Ansarullah rebels who have since last year frequently clashed with supporters of the Sunni party al Islah.
Sanaa accuses Ansarullah of being backed by Shia-majority Iran.
With the start of Ramazan on July 10, frictions between the two sides have sharpened in the capital.
Salafists have been trying to seize control of a mosque led by a Zaidi imam in Sanaa, in response to a similar move by Ansarullah supporters against another mosque led by a Sunni cleric in the capital.
This has sparked clashes in which knives were used and also a bomb attack that wounded five people last week, according to witnesses and police.
And on Thursday, gunmen on a motorbike shot dead two Shias and wounded four others who were staging a sit-in protest in the capital, an Ansarullah rebel told AFP.
In a bid to ease tensions, the authorities have secured a commitment from both sides “not to use force to impose their own rites in mosques,” according to Hmoud Obad, the minister of Waqf
“In Yemen, there are no mosques for Zaidis and others for Sunnis. People have lived and prayed together for centuries, but the political polarisation taking place threatens to divide them,” he told AFP.
The rebels, who belong to the Zaidi sect of Shia, are mainly concentrated in the north and make up 25 percent of Yemen’s Sunni-majority population estimated at 25 million.
The Zaidi rebels, also known as Huthis after their late leader Abdel Malek al Huthi, rose up in 2004 against the government of ex-president Ali Abdullah Saleh, accusing it of marginalising them politically and economically.
Thousands of people were killed in the uprising before a ceasefire was agreed in February 2010.
But their frustration was compounded by the rise to power for the first time in Yemen’s history of a Sunni president, according to a participant in an ongoing national dialogue.
Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi replaced Saleh, who is Zaidi, in February 2012, under a UN- and Gulf-brokered power transfer deal which led to the former strongman’s resignation following 11 months of mass protests against his rule.
Despite reservations about the deal, the Zaidis are taking part in the national dialogue launched in March to draft a constitution and prepare for elections.
The participant at the dialogue, who requested anonymity, said the rebels are “trying to strengthen their growing political role by achieving a stronger presence in the mosques,” warning that “sectarian tensions will intensify.”
But a representative of Ansarullah at the talks, Abdelkarim al Jadhban, holds al Islah, which is close to the Muslim Brotherhood, and its Salafist allies backed by Saudi Arabia responsible for the sectarian tensions.
“The Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafists want to take control of all mosques,” including those in Saada, “where they have their own places of worship as well as the biggest centre for terrorism in Dammaj,” he told AFP.
Zaidi rebels in late 2011 laid siege to Dar al-Hadith, an Islamic institution that trains Sunni preachers and believes in the strictest and most draconian interpretations of Islam, in Dammaj near Saada.
The action sparked months of clashes that left dozens killed in the area, where the government’s control is weak.
 
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Yemenis battle for mosques in Sunni-Shia divide
By AFP Published: July 22, 2013
DUBAI: Sunni and Shia Zaidi rebels in Yemen are waging a battle for the control of mosques, in a spillover of the sectarian face-off rattling the Middle East.
The showdown was previously confined to the northern province of Saada, stronghold of Zaidi Ansarullah rebels who have since last year frequently clashed with supporters of the Sunni party al Islah.
Sanaa accuses Ansarullah of being backed by Shia-majority Iran.
With the start of Ramazan on July 10, frictions between the two sides have sharpened in the capital.
Salafists have been trying to seize control of a mosque led by a Zaidi imam in Sanaa, in response to a similar move by Ansarullah supporters against another mosque led by a Sunni cleric in the capital.
This has sparked clashes in which knives were used and also a bomb attack that wounded five people last week, according to witnesses and police.
And on Thursday, gunmen on a motorbike shot dead two Shias and wounded four others who were staging a sit-in protest in the capital, an Ansarullah rebel told AFP.
In a bid to ease tensions, the authorities have secured a commitment from both sides “not to use force to impose their own rites in mosques,” according to Hmoud Obad, the minister of Waqf
“In Yemen, there are no mosques for Zaidis and others for Sunnis. People have lived and prayed together for centuries, but the political polarisation taking place threatens to divide them,” he told AFP.
The rebels, who belong to the Zaidi sect of Shia, are mainly concentrated in the north and make up 25 percent of Yemen’s Sunni-majority population estimated at 25 million.
The Zaidi rebels, also known as Huthis after their late leader Abdel Malek al Huthi, rose up in 2004 against the government of ex-president Ali Abdullah Saleh, accusing it of marginalising them politically and economically.
Thousands of people were killed in the uprising before a ceasefire was agreed in February 2010.
But their frustration was compounded by the rise to power for the first time in Yemen’s history of a Sunni president, according to a participant in an ongoing national dialogue.
Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi replaced Saleh, who is Zaidi, in February 2012, under a UN- and Gulf-brokered power transfer deal which led to the former strongman’s resignation following 11 months of mass protests against his rule.
Despite reservations about the deal, the Zaidis are taking part in the national dialogue launched in March to draft a constitution and prepare for elections.
The participant at the dialogue, who requested anonymity, said the rebels are “trying to strengthen their growing political role by achieving a stronger presence in the mosques,” warning that “sectarian tensions will intensify.”
But a representative of Ansarullah at the talks, Abdelkarim al Jadhban, holds al Islah, which is close to the Muslim Brotherhood, and its Salafist allies backed by Saudi Arabia responsible for the sectarian tensions.
“The Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafists want to take control of all mosques,” including those in Saada, “where they have their own places of worship as well as the biggest centre for terrorism in Dammaj,” he told AFP.
Zaidi rebels in late 2011 laid siege to Dar al-Hadith, an Islamic institution that trains Sunni preachers and believes in the strictest and most draconian interpretations of Islam, in Dammaj near Saada.
The action sparked months of clashes that left dozens killed in the area, where the government’s control is weak.

This shows that Religious brotherhood is fake as some Pakistani member quotes often about Islamic brotherhood. Cultural bond is the real binding force.
 
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Zaidis are also fighting with Saudi forces.. since 9-11.

Where do they get so much training and weapons.
 
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shia community is good

Good eh?
Tell me how they threat sunni in Iran, Iraq, Yemen and Syria?

Not just in there, shia also and always trying to intimidate muslim around the world when they have a power,
Not just in Yemen, In here shia also make a lot of problems, recenly they forbid people from praying in Masjid Al-Bukhari in Bekasi

Here is the link, but it's in indonesian
www.eramuslim.com/berita/info-umat/syiah-berulah-di-bekasi-ahlussunnah-sedikitpun-tidak-gentar.htm
 
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Good eh?
Tell me how they threat sunni in Iran, Iraq, Yemen and Syria?

Not just in there, shia also and always trying to intimidate muslim around the world when they have a power
Not just in Yemen, I'm here shia also make a lot of problems, recenly they forbid people from praying in Masjid Al-Bukhari in Bekasi

Here is the link, but it's in indonesian
www.eramuslim/berita/info-umat/syiah-berulah-di-bekasi-ahlussunnah-sedikitpun-tidak-gentar.htm

in india its always sunnis that pick up fight.. not shia. Shias are usually upper class and rich and educated here. Hence the perception.
 
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Zaidis are also fighting with Saudi forces.. since 9-11.

Where do they get so much training and weapons.

I can see the hypocrisy in my people man ... can you see that in yours ??? was Bulhe Shah a wahabi or salafi ??? I listen to him from time to time ... follow the true path your forefathers chose .... they saw the beauty in the poetry of Sufi saints not in Saudis or Persians !!!
 
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I can see the hypocrisy in my people man ... can you see that in yours ??? was Bulhe Shah a wahabi or salafi ??? I listen to him from time to time ... follow the true path your forefathers chose .... they saw the beauty in the poetry of Sufi saints not in Saudis or Persians !!!

what is wahabi and slafi?
Sufi was also title, for those who didn't care about the earthly materialism, because they found there.. one almighty God.
They believed humanity is what there God desire from them, they fell in love with God after learning about its powers and qualities.
They became fearless as they feared only God... and just went around advising people about life and purpose of life, in a way people would not get bored, while understand more.
They stressed the need for education but also warned that simply reading books does not enlighten you.

482882_348243421943193_418948002_n.jpg



I have wrote this para above.. simply because you were trying to mislead here.
 
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what is wahabi and slafi?
Sufi was also title, for those who didn't care about the earthly materialism, because they found there.. one almighty God.
They believed humanity is what there God desire from them, they fell in love with God after learning about its powers and qualities.
They became fearless as they feared only God... and just went around advising people about life and purpose of life, in a way people would not get bored, while understand more.
They stressed the need for education but also warned that simply reading books does not enlighten you.
I have wrote this para above.. simply because you were trying to mislead here.
My apologies if you think i was trying to lecture you or anything .. it wasn't my intentions ... and if you think there is more to than loving your God and walking on the path described by him then godspeed to you. I wasn't trying to mislead anyone and my sincere apologies once again !!!
 
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in india its always sunnis that pick up fight.. not shia. Shias are usually upper class and rich and educated here. Hence the perception.

not respect , a lots of respect ..........

if you will survey......Hindu has no problem with shia......and they love to interact with them ........but with sunni always maintaining distance
 
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in india its always sunnis that pick up fight.. not shia. Shias are usually upper class and rich and educated here. Hence the perception.

I doubt that and what happen here is the opposit way, and even that was right
Tell me, who is the rich one
Bilal or Abu Jahal?
Personal Wealt is not a guarantee that you're the right one

@neveen mishra
Yes becouse Hindu and Majoosi is quite the same Religion BTW
 
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I doubt that and what happen here is the opposit way, and even that was right
Tell me, who is the rich one
Bilal or Abu Jahal?
Personal Wealt is not a guarantee that you're the right one

@neveen mishra
Yes becouse Hindu and Majoosi is quite the same Religion BTW

pak what ever i said ....it was only in indian aspect .....
pl don't relate with yourself....

Indonesia samua orang ada bagus..............tidak mara mara
 
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And in Yemen, they threatened the Jews of Sa'dah, the Sunni tribes, and the Yemen Gov't. I can't make any comments on the Shia community in India, but here we see something different.
in india its always sunnis that pick up fight.. not shia. Shias are usually upper class and rich and educated here. Hence the perception.

not respect , a lots of respect ..........

if you will survey......Hindu has no problem with shia......and they love to interact with them ........but with sunni always maintaining distance

It's a distance the Sunnis normally keep :rofl:
 
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