Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Second Battle of Mukalla refers to an armed conflict between al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and the Saudi-led Coalition. The aim of the coalition offensive was to disable the newly resurgent al-Qaeda Emirate in Yemen by recapturing its capital, Mukalla. The battle led to a coalition victory, in which the coalition forces gained ...
The First Battle of Mukalla (2015) was a battle between al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, local tribesmen, and the Yemen Army for control of the coastal city of ...
Battle of Mukalla may refer to: Battle of Mukalla (2015) Battle of Mukalla (2016) This page was last edited on 31 July 2020, at 14:23 (UTC). Text is available under ...
Sve je za ljude: Dragoslav Lazić: Comedy: Virtuelna stvarnost Virtual Reality: Ratiborka Duda Ćeramilac: Maja Mandžuka, Sonja Savić, Dragan Nikolić: Drama/Action/Thriller: 2002: Mrtav ladan: Milorad Milinković: Srđan Žika Todorović, Nenad Jezdić, Sonja Kolačarić, Nikola Đuričko, Mihajlo Bata Paskaljević: Comedy: Država nrtvih Janez
Battle of Vukovar: 1994 Yugoslavia A Diary of Insults: Дневник увреда 1993 Dnevnik uvreda 1993: Zdravko Šotra: Drama. Life in Serbia during the Yugoslav wars 1994 Yugoslavia In the Middle of Nowhere: Ни на небу, ни на земљи Ni na nebu, ni na zemlji: Miloš Radivojević: Drama. Belgrade during Yugoslav Wars: 1995 ...
Battle of Mukalla (2015) Battle of Mukalla (2016) M. June 2016 Mukalla attacks; Mukalla Rural District; O. OS35 (bulk carrier) P. Port of Mukalla; R. Riyan Airport ...
The June 2016 Mukalla attacks occurred on 28 June 2016. The death toll counts were officially at least 43, with around 37 injured. ISIL claimed, that 8 suicide bombers killed 50 people. There were at least seven separate attacks. The attacks occurred in the Hadhramaut province capital, Mukalla. Al-Qaeda was originally suspected to be behind the ...
Mukalla in the mid 1900s. Captain Haines, a British officer who surveyed Yemen in the 1830s, described Mukalla as a town of 4,500 inhabitants with a significant trade in slaves. [7] British explorers Theodore Bent and Mabel Bent used Mukalla several times in the 1890s to enter and exit the Wadi Hadhramaut: