The Borneo Post (Sabah)

UAE claims military presence on Yemen’s Socotra ‘distorted’

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DUBAI: The United Arab Emirates, facing criticism from top Yemeni allies over its presence on the island of Socotra, said its role on the strategic Yemeni territory had been “distorted”.

The UAE is key part of the Saudiled coalition in Yemen, launched in 2015 to roll back Huthi rebel gains and restore the internatio­nallyrecog­nised government to power.

Splits have emerged, however, in the pro-government camp.

In January, the government’s de facto capital of Aden was rocked by deadly clashes that saw UAEbacked forces seize much of the city from other pro-government forces.

On Friday, a Saudi delegation travelled to Socotra to diffuse new tensions on the island after the UAE deployed forces without informing the government of President Abedraboo Mansour Hadi.

The delegation met with Yemeni Prime Minister Ahmed Dagher in the presence of an Emirati official, Yemen’s Saba news agency reported.

Dagher neverthele­ss took to social media on Sunday to question the UAE military presence he witnessed during an official visit to Socotra.

“On April 30 ... the first Emirati military aircraft arrived carrying two armoured vehicles and more than 50 Emirati soldiers, followed immediatel­y by two other aircraft carrying tanks and armoured vehicles and soldiers,” Dagher said in a statement published to Facebook.

“This raised a number of questions, and left the island in a state of anxiety.”

Socotra, which has been spared the violence that has ravaged mainland Yemen, sits at the exit of a bustling shipping lane that leads from the Mediterran­ean Sea to the Indian Ocean.

Like Aden, it become a flashpoint of contention in the anti-Huthi camp.

“The continuing disagreeme­nt and its spread to all the liberated provinces down to Socotra, is clearly harmful ... and something that can no longer be hidden, and its impact has spread to all military and civil institutio­ns,” Dagher said.

“Correcting this situation is everyone’s responsibi­lity.”

The UAE Foreign Ministry said it was “surprised” by the Yemeni prime minister’s statement and blamed the Muslim Brotherhoo­d for drumming up anti-Emirati sentiment over Socotra.

“These malicious campaigns, which are led by the Muslim Brotherhoo­d ... are part of a long and repeated series of attempts to distort the role of the UAE,” it said.

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