Three Americans held captive by Shiite rebels in Yemen's capital have been freed, Oman's state news agency and officials in Yemen said Thursday.
The short English-language statement on the Oman News Agency said only that the U.S. State Department had asked Oman to bring the Americans out of the country. It did not elaborate or provide information on their identities.
However, independent security officials in Yemen and members of the Shiite rebels known as Houthis said the Americans had been detained for at least two months at a Houthi security building in the rebel-held capital of Sanaa.
The rebels and the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity as they weren't authorized to brief journalists, did not say why the Americans were held. Two of them were working with the United Nations, the officials said, while offering no information about the third.
The Houthis previously said they had detained two Americans on suspicion of being spies, but it wasn't immediately clear if those two were included in the release.
Some foreigners have been held in recent months by fighters involved in the country's ongoing civil war, either as political hostages or for ransom.
The Oman News Agency quoted an unnamed Foreign Ministry official in its report as saying: "The three U.S. citizens were transported from Sanaa to Muscat onboard ... one of the Royal Air Force of Oman aircrafts, after which they will return to their country."
The U.S. Embassy in Muscat had no immediate comment.
On Nov. 10, U.S. officials announced detained American contractor John Hamen, who worked for a company managing U.N. facilities in Sanaa, had died there, without saying what killed him. Hamen and another American had arrived in Yemen from Djibouti on a U.N. aircraft on Oct. 20.
In September, the Houthis released six foreign hostages, including two Americans, after negotiations conducted by Omani officials. That came after the release in June of American freelance journalist Casey Coombs. Following Coombs' release, which Oman also mediated, State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said U.S. officials were working to win the release of several Americans detained in Yemen.
Yemen, the Arab world's poorest nation, has been embroiled in fighting that pits the Iran-backed Houthis and forces loyal to a former president against the Saudi-backed and internationally recognized government. The Saudi-led coalition has been carrying out airstrikes against the rebels and their allies since March, fearful of Iranian influence spreading across the Arabian Peninsula.
Others fighting the Houthis include southern separatists, local militias and Sunni extremists like Yemen's al-Qaida branch, considered by Washington to be the most dangerous offshoot of the terror network.
At least 5,700 people have been killed in the conflict in Yemen since March 26, including 830 women and children, the U.N. said Wednesday. The war has pushed the country to the brink of famine, as the U.N. says over 21 million people — 80 percent of the population — need humanitarian assistance.
The quiet sultanate of Oman, long a go-to negotiator in the Mideast, stands apart from its Gulf Arab neighbors in not joining the Saudi-led coalition. It instead has positioned itself as a quiet mediator by hosting talks involving the rebels and other parties. It also was crucial in facilitating negotiations between the U.S. and Iran over the Islamic Republic's contested nuclear program.
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Al-Haj reported from Sanaa, Yemen.