The Phnom Penh Post

Yemen separatist­s pin down gov’t in Aden

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YEMENI ministers were holed up in Aden’s presidenti­al palace yesterday after separatist forces seized effective control of the southern port city, dealing another blow to the country’s embattled government.

Pro-separatist forces backed by the UAE known as the “security belt” fanned out across the city – the country’s de facto capital – after three days of fighting that left 38 people dead.

The United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia have backed the beleaguere­d government of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi since intervenin­g against Shiite Huthi rebels in Yemen’s civil war in March 2015. But the Arab allies, whose military coalition was launched to roll back rebel gains and restore Yemen’s “legitimate” government to power in Sanaa, have not intervened to prop up Hadi against his separatist rivals.

The coalition has instead urged the separatist­s to exercise restraint and called on the government to weigh up the demands of its rivals.

While Yemen’s president resides in the Saudi capital, the infighting in the antiHuthi camp has left Prime Minister Ahmed bin Dagher and a number of senior government figures holed up in the Aden presidenti­al palace.

A military source said the separatist­s had also taken over the bin Dagher’s office chief overnight. By yesterday morning, the clashes appeared to subside.

The United Nations raised alarm bells yesterday over the impact of the violent standoff on more than 40,000 Yemenis recently displaced to Aden, and now cut off from aid. “UNHCR emergency aid distributi­ons and humanitari­an assessment­s planned this week for vulnerable, displaced Yemenis have now been postponed and UNHCR humanitari­an cargo remains at Aden port unable to be released,” the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) said via Twitter.

“We are also particular­ly concerned for those newly displaced in Aden who have fled other areas in Yemen. More than 40,000 people fled to Aden and nearby governorat­es since December and we anticipate more displaceme­nt as people continue to flee from hostilitie­s in the west coast.”

At least 38 people have been killed and 222 wounded in Aden since Sunday, according to the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross.

The separatist­s, who for months have pushed for the reinstatem­ent of South Yemen as an independen­t country, now control most of the city.

 ?? SALEH AL-OBEIDI/AFP ?? A fighter for the separatist walks with smoke billowing in the background in the government’s de facto capital Aden on Tuesday.
SALEH AL-OBEIDI/AFP A fighter for the separatist walks with smoke billowing in the background in the government’s de facto capital Aden on Tuesday.

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