The Borneo Post (Sabah)

UN presses Yemen militia to cede power

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SANAA: The United Nations Security Council on Sunday urged Yemen’s Huthis to cede power, release President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi and negotiate in “good faith,” after the Shiite militia vowed to defy the body’s “threats.”

Yemen is a traditiona­l US ally in the fight against al-Qaeda, but the impoverish­ed Arabian Peninsula country has descended into chaos since the Huthis overran the capital in September.

In another city they captured last year, Ibb in central Yemen, Huthis fired on hundreds of protesters to disperse them on Sunday, wounding several.

Militiamen also clashed with Sunni tribes east of the central city of Baida, which the Huthis have been trying to overrun as they extend their influence.

Tribal sources said at least 12 Huthis were killed, but there was no independen­t confirmati­on of the toll.

On February 6, the Huthis ousted the government and dissolved parliament, tightening their grip after Western-backed President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi resigned in protest at their advance.

UN Secretary-General Ban Kimoon has warned that Yemen is falling apart and called for Hadi’s reinstatem­ent.

Citing security concerns, nine Arab and Western countries shuttered their embassies i n Yemen last week and evacuated diplomats.

In its resolution, the Security Council demanded that the Huthis “immediatel­y and unconditio­nally” engage in “good faith” i n UN-brokered negotiatio­ns,withdrawth­eirforces from government institutio­ns and relinquish power.

The text, adopted unanimousl­y by all 15 council members, also demanded that the militia release Hadi, Prime Minister Khaled Bahah and other officials and activists under de facto house arrest or in detention.

All parties must “accelerate inclusive UN-brokered negotiatio­ns” and set a date for a constituti­onal referendum and elections, the resolution added.

It raised the possibilit­y of sanctions, without going as far as Gulf countries, which have demanded coercive measures under Chapter Seven of the UN Charter.

Western diplomats said Russia, which is already under US and European sanctions over its annexation of Crimea and backing of rebels in eastern Ukraine, was reluctant to vote for sanctions.

It was the council’s first resolution on Yemen since the Huthis grabbed power in a move the United States and Gulf Arab countries described as a “coup.”

The six-nation Gulf Cooperatio­n Council said Saturday it would act if the rival factions in Yemen fail to resolve their difference­s, without elaboratin­g.

The 57-member Organisati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n (OIC) voiced support for the GCC statement, and the Arab League said it will hold an emergency meeting on Yemen on Wednesday.

Huthi spokesman Mohammed Abdulsalam, quoted by the official, militia-controlled Saba news agency, insisted that “the Yemeni people won’t cede power in the face of threats.”

He denounced as “provocativ­e blackmail”demandsfor­theHuthis to relinquish power and criticised the withdrawal of ambassador­s.

Intheirbid­toestablis­hauthority across Yemen, the militiamen have tried to stifle opposition and have been accused of detaining and torturing opponents.

They announced a ban on antiHuthi protests last week and have repeatedly used live ammunition to disperse demonstrat­ions in Sanaa and Ibb.

The family of one protester detained by the Huthis last week said he had died late Friday of torture wounds suffered in captivity.

Another t wo demonstrat­ors held with him are in hospital after being found wounded and left on a street.

On Sunday, several protesters were wounded in Ibb when the Huthisfire­dliveround­stodispers­e hundreds of people demanding the release of an activist, witnesses said.

Ahmed Hazzaa, a leader of the anti-Huthi Rafdh (rejection) Movement, was detained on Saturday by Shiite militiamen, members of his group told AFP.

The Huthis are accused of receiving support from Shiite-dominated Iran, which criticised the “hasty action” of closing embassies in Sanaa, and insisted the Huthis were fighting “corruption and terrorism.”

Meanwhile, political forces and governors of three southern provinces--Aden,Lahij,andMahra -- formed a local leadership group rejecting the Huthi “coup.”

In a statement issued at the end of a meeting in the south’s main city Aden, leaders of the three provinces demanded Hadi’s reinstatem­ent and affirmed their support for Yemen becoming a federation based on the outcome of a national dialogue held last year. — AFP

 ??  ?? Jordanian Ambassador to the United Nations Dina Kawar (right) speaks with British Ambassador to the UN Mark Layall Grant before the Security Council voted in favour of a resolution demanding the Houthi militia’s withdrawal from Yemeni government...
Jordanian Ambassador to the United Nations Dina Kawar (right) speaks with British Ambassador to the UN Mark Layall Grant before the Security Council voted in favour of a resolution demanding the Houthi militia’s withdrawal from Yemeni government...
 ??  ?? Children carry banners inside a cage during a protest, against forces loyal to Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad, in Douma Eastern AlGhouta, near Damascus. — Reuters photo
Children carry banners inside a cage during a protest, against forces loyal to Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad, in Douma Eastern AlGhouta, near Damascus. — Reuters photo

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