Photo taken on June 29, 2022 shows the car bomb explosion site where a motorcade of a Yemeni high-ranking security official was struck in Yemen's southern port city of Aden. "The car bomb blast hit the convoy of General Saleh Al-Sayd, commander of the Security forces in the neighboring southern province of Lahj when his motorcade was passing through a main street near Aden's airport," the local government source said on condition of anonymity.(Photo: Xinhua)
Al-Qaeda's Yemen branch released a video on Saturday showing a United Nations worker who was abducted in the war-torn country more than six months ago, the SITE Intelligence Group reported.
Five UN staff members were kidnapped in Yemen's southern province of Abyan in February while returning to the port city of Aden "after having completed a field mission," UN spokesperson Eri Kaneko told AFP at the time.
In Saturday's video message, apparently recorded on August 9, Akam Sofyol Anam, identified by SITE as Bangladeshi, urges "the UN, the international community, the humanitarian organizations, to please come forward... and meet the demands of my captors," without outlining the demands.
He said he was facing "serious health trouble," including heart problems, and needed "immediate medical support and hospitalization," according to SITE, which monitors extremist activity.
Anam, who SITE identified as the "director of the United Nations Office of Security and Safety in Yemen," said he and four colleagues were kidnapped on February 11.
Yemen has been gripped by conflict since the Houthi rebels took control of the capital Sanaa in 2014, triggering a Saudi-led military intervention in support of the beleaguered government the following year.
Hundreds of thousands have died, directly from fighting as well as indirectly, and millions have been displaced in what the UN has called the world's worst humanitarian crisis.
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and militants loyal to the Islamic State group have thrived in the chaos.
"The United Nations is in close contact with the authorities to secure their release," its spokesperson said.
AQAP has carried out attacks on both rebel and government targets in Yemen as well as foreigners.
AFP