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Appendix D – Statement of Reasons – Islamic Army of Aden (IAA)

Islamic Army of Aden (IAA)

(Also known as: Aden Abyan Islamic Army (AAIA); Islamic Army of Aden Abyan; Aden Islamic Army; Muhammed’s Army/Army of Mohammed; Jaish Adan al Islami)

 

The following information is based on publicly available details about the Islamic Army of Aden (IAA). These details have been corroborated by classified material.  ASIO assesses that the details set out below are accurate and reliable.

The Islamic Army of Aden (IAA) is listed in the United Nations 1267 Committee’s consolidated list and as a proscribed terrorist organisation by the European Union and the governments of the UK, New Zealand and Canada. The US has designated the IAA as a terrorist organisation on the Terrorist Exclusion List.


Current status of the IAA


The IAA is a Sunni Islamic extremist group and was formed in 1996 as a splinter group of the Yemeni Islamic Jihad. The IAA first came to public prominence in 1998 when it issued statements detailing its intention to overthrow the Yemeni government and implement Sharia law; and called for operations against Western interests in Yemen.

The IAA predominantly operates in the southern governorates of Yemen – particularly Aden and Abyan. The IAA has been involved in a number of terrorist attacks against Yemeni and Western interests. It has used bombings and hostage-taking as a means of furthering its goals. In 1998, the IAA abducted 16 Western tourists. Four of the tourists, including an Australian, were killed in a rescue attempt. The IAA also claimed responsibility for the suicide bomb attack against the USS Cole on 12 October 2000 and the MV Limburg on 7 October 2002.  However, these operations are generally believed to have been al-Qa’ida operations.

The IAA is associated with al-Qa’ida and shares similar goals of driving Westerners from the region and removing the Yemeni government in order to establish an Islamic state.      

Although current specific funding arrangements for the group are unknown, the IAA has traditionally conducted criminal activities as a means of raising money.

Between 2003 and 2006, counter-terrorism operations by Yemeni authorities reduced the size of the group and limited its operational effectiveness. However, the IAA has not been completely eradicated and there is no indication the intent of the IAA has changed.  IAA members were last arrested in 2006,  including the reported arrest of individuals suspected of involvement in terrorist activities in Iraq. In June 2008, IAA’s leader, Khalid Abd al-Nabi, gave an interview which suggested he retained similar goals and ideology.  He also stated the Abyan Governorate is ready for the emergence of IAA.  While the interview does not explicitly call for a return to violence, it contains nothing to suggest that IAA has departed from its previous intentions to engage in terrorist acts.

Objectives

The IAA aims to remove Western interests from Yemen and wider Arabian Peninsula, overthrow the current Yemeni government and establish an Islamic state.

Leadership and membership

The IAA’s founder and former leader Zain al-Abidin al-Mihdar (aka Abu Hassan) was executed in 1999 for his role in the 1998 hostage-taking of 16 Western tourists in Yemen. Founding members were veterans of the struggle in Afghanistan against the Soviets. Khalid Abd al-Nabi assumed leadership of the IAA before surrendering to authorities in October 2003. In return for his cooperation Abd al-Nabi received a Presidential pardon that same year. Abd al-Nabi continues to appear in, and make statements to, the media, usually in relation to IAA.

Although the current strength of the IAA is unknown, previous estimates of the group’s size were between 30 to 100 core members divided into a number of small groups or cells.  The group is likely to now have no more than 30 core members.

IAA engagement in terrorist activities

Security operations by the Yemeni authorities have restricted the IAA’s capabilities within Yemen. However, IAA operatives still exist in Yemen and could undertake terrorist activities if and when the opportunity arises.

Terrorist attacks and plans for terrorist attacks for which responsibility has been claimed by, or reliably attributed to, the IAA, have included:

Conclusion

The Criminal Code provides that for an organisation to be listed as a terrorist organisation, the Attorney-General must be satisfied that:

  (a) the organisation is directly or indirectly engaged in, preparing, planning, assisting in or fostering the doing of a terrorist act (whether or not a terrorist act has occured or will occur); or
  (b) the organisation advocates the doing of a terrorist act (whether or not a terrorist act has occured or will occur).

 

On the basis of the above information, ASIO assesses that Ansar al-Islam is directly engaged in preparing, planning, assisting in or fostering the doing of terrorist acts. It is considered that the acts attributable to Ansar al-Islam are terrorist acts as they:

 

  (i) are done with the intention of advancing a political cause, namely, creating an Islamic caliphate in Iraq;
  (ii) are intended to coerce or influence by intimidation the governments of foreign countries, including Iraq and Coalition countries, and/or intimidate a sections of the public; and
  (iii) constitute acts which cause serious physical harm to persons, including death, as well as serious damage to property.

 

This assessment is corroborated by information provided by reliable and credible intelligence sources.

 

 

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