The National - News

Yemen’s STC withdraws from government positions in Aden

- ALI MAHMOOD Aden

The Southern Transition­al Council has begun withdrawin­g from positions in Aden that it seized from the Yemen government, the Saudi-led Arab Coalition yesterday said.

Yemeni Informatio­n Minister Muammar Al Iryani said supporters of the STC had pulled out of the government headquarte­rs, the supreme court, the central bank, the justice department, Cabinet offices and Aden’s main hospital.

Mr Al Iryani said preparatio­ns were also under way for a withdrawal of fighters from the interior ministry and the Aden oil refinery.

STC spokesman Nazar Anwar told The National that the group had agreed to withdraw from these positions as well as the judiciary headquarte­rs.

“We are still working together with the coalition committee to reach a perfect deal to manage the situation in Aden completely,” Mr Anwar said.

Reports indicated that coalition troops had moved in around positions vacated by the STC’s military wing, the Security Belt Forces.

The coalition said yesterday that the positions occupied in Aden would be handed over to the government under coalition supervisio­n.

The coalition, of which the UAE is a part, also called on all forces “to unite in order to foil Iran’s destructiv­e plan in Yemen” and prevent attacks by extremist factions such as Al Qaeda and ISIS.

The withdrawal paves the way for Saudi-brokered reconcilia­tion talks between the two sides after days of clashes in the southern port city where the government has been based following the seizure of the capital, Sanaa, by Houthi rebels in 2015.

Supported and trained by the coalition, government and STC forces have been jointly fighting the rebels, who still control Sanaa and large areas in the north and west Yemen.

A coalition statement yesterday praised the transition­al council for observing calls for a ceasefire from Saudi Arabia and the UAE and for “beginning today to withdraw its troops and combat elements to their previous positions before recent events, and hand over Yemeni government headquarte­rs under the supervisio­n of the coalition”.

The coalition also praised the government for its response to “the call for restraint during the crisis, to prioritise the interests of the Yemeni people and preserve the gains of the coalition supporting the legitimacy in Yemen to restore the state and its institutio­ns”.

On the ground in Aden, life has largely returned to normal with shops opening and beaches becoming busy.

The internatio­nally recognised government of President Abdrabu Mansur Hadi had said it was willing to join reconcilia­tion talks but only after the STC ceded control of the positions its forces seized during the fighting in Aden this month.

The clashes broke out after the STC accused Al Islah party, a branch of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, of being complicit in a Houthi missile attack that killed a prominent military commander and dozens of other officers at a military camp in Aden on August 1.

The STC is a grouping of southern political leaders who say they support President Hadi but also advocate the restoratio­n of the state of South Yemen that existed before the unificatio­n of the country in 1990.

 ?? Getty ?? President Abdrabu Mansur Hadi’s government said it was willing to join reconcilia­tion talks but with conditions
Getty President Abdrabu Mansur Hadi’s government said it was willing to join reconcilia­tion talks but with conditions

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