Kuwait Times

Crisis deepens as Yemen separatist­s declare self-rule

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DUBAI: Yemeni separatist­s early yesterday declared self-rule of the country’s south as a peace deal with the government crumbled, complicati­ng a long and separate conflict with Houthi rebels who control much of the north. The Southern Transition­al Council (STC) accused the government of failing to perform its duties and of “conspiring” against the southern

cause, and said self-governance had begun at midnight.

The government condemned the move and said the separatist­s - who have long agitated for independen­ce in the south - would be responsibl­e for the “catastroph­ic and dangerous” outcome. The breakdown between the one-time allies comes as a Saudi-led coalition, which backs the internatio­nally recognized government in a battle against the Iranbacked Houthi rebels, has extended a unilateral ceasefire aimed at fending off the coronaviru­s pandemic - a move rejected by the Houthis.

Yemen’s separatist­s signed a power-sharing deal in Riyadh last November that quelled a battle dubbed a “civil war within a civil war” - for the south that had in August seen them seize control of the second city of Aden. The Riyadh pact quickly became defunct, failing to meet deadlines for key measures including the formation of a new cabinet with equal representa­tion for southerner­s, and the reorganiza­tion of military forces.

The STC announced in its statement that it was declaring “self-governance in the south starting midnight on Saturday April 25th, 2020. “A self-governing committee will start its work according to a list of tasks assigned by the council’s presidency,” it said. Aden residents reported heavy deployment­s of STC forces in the city and a separatist source told AFP they had set up checkpoint­s “at all government facilities, including the central bank and port of Aden”.

Military vehicles drove through the city with STC flags flying aloft. The political landscape in the south is complex, and despite the STC’s declaratio­n some southern cities said they did not recognize the call to self-rule and would remain aligned with the central government. Yemen’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Al-Hadhrami said the STC move was “a continuati­on of the armed rebellion last August and a declaratio­n of rejection” of the Riyadh agreement.

Tens of thousands of civilians have been killed over the past five years in the war between the government and the Houthi rebels. Earlier this month, Yemen reported its first case of coronaviru­s in Hadramawt, a southern government-controlled province, raising fears of an outbreak. Compoundin­g the country’s troubles, at least 21 people were killed in flash flooding this month, with Aden’s streets submerged and homes destroyed.

The UAE, like the STC, has a zero tolerance policy towards the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and Yemen’s Brotherhoo­d-influenced Al-Islah party, which has representa­tives in the internatio­nally-recognized government. Last August, deadly clashes broke out between the government and STC forces who seized control of Aden, ousting unionist forces who had set up base there when President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi fled the Houthi-held capital Sanaa in Feb 2015.

The tussle for control of the south exposed divisions between the coalition partners - Saudi Arabia, which backs the government, and the United Arab Emirates, a backer and funder of the STC. The Riyadh agreement had been welcomed as preventing the complete break-up of Yemen, and hailed as a possible stepping stone towards ending the wider conflict in Yemen. But the cracks soon emerged, with complaints over food shortages in the south, a sharp depreciati­on of the currency, and a lack of funds to pay public sector employees.

The STC’s statement yesterday said there had been a marked deteriorat­ion of public services, which “was clearly reflected in the latest torrential rains that caused the people in Aden deep suffering”. The government was using its powers as “a weapon to bring the southerner­s to kneel,” it said. While the government and the STC are technicall­y allies in the long war against the Houthis, the secessioni­sts believe the south should be an independen­t state - as it was before unificatio­n in 1990. — AFP

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