The Asian Age

YEMEN AIR FORCE SHUTS AIRPORT

Troops turn away passengers, stop flights to protest commander’s sacking

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Sana’a, April 7: Members of Yemen’s Air Force shut down the capital’s airport on Saturday, stopping all flights in protest at the sacking of their commander, a half- brother of former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, an aviation official said.

Military vehicles full of soldiers turned passengers away from Sana’a airport and prevented flights from taking off or landing, witnesses said. The action is a challenge to President Abd- Rabbu Mansour Hadi who replaced Saleh earlier this year. On Friday Mr Hadi sacked the Air Force head in a reshuffle intended to prise key military posts from Mr Saleh’s allies and restructur­e the armed forces, which split during the uprising against Mr Saleh’s rule, with some units openly siding with protesters. — Reuters

Sana’a, April 7: Members of Yemen’s Air Force shut down the capital’s airport on Saturday, stopping all flights in protest at the sacking of their commander, a half brother of former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, an aviation official said.

Military vehicles full of soldiers turned passengers away from Sana’a airport and prevented flights from taking off or landing, witnesses said. The action is a challenge to President Abd- Rabbu Mansour Hadi who replaced Saleh earlier this year.

On Friday Mr Hadi sacked the Air Force head in a reshuffle intended to prise key military posts from Mr Saleh’s allies and restructur­e the armed forces, which split during the uprising against Mr Saleh’s rule, with some units openly siding with protesters.

Protests demanding the resignatio­n of the air force commander, General Saleh al- Ahmar, earlier this year brought several airports to a standstill. Hadi on Friday shifted him to be assistant to the defence minister.

The airport’s closure highlights the challenges Mr Hadi faces in restructur­ing Yemen’s Army, upsetting the entrenched interests of Mr Saleh’s associates as well as those of a powerful general, Ali Mohsen al- Ahmar, some of whose allies were also sacked in Friday’s shakeup.

General Ali Mohsen turned against Mr Saleh early last year along with a chunk of the armed forces, sparking sporadic open combat on the streets of Sana’a with loyalist troops and tribal militiamen that threatened to push the country into civil war.

A committee tasked with demilitari­sing Sana’a was on Saturday dismantlin­g checkpoint­s set up by the warring factions in the western part of the city, to enforce a withdrawal of armed tribesmen and troops from the streets by the end of the week. Previous such efforts have failed.

Mr Hadi faces a sectarian rebellion in Yemen’s north and an emboldened wing of Al Qaeda concentrat­ed in the south, which is also home to a separatist movement seeking to revive a socialist state Saleh united with the north in 1990.

Yemen’s state news agency had been hacked on Saturday, apparently by southern secessioni­st sympathise­rs. Instead of the usual news feed, there were pictures of southern leaders and the former state’s flag.

“Your turn has come all major Yemeni websites. If we do not see the southern flag waving above Yemeni sites we will eventually destroy them,” read a statement posted on the site. Some southerner­s accuse northerner­s of usurping their resources and discrimina­ting against them. — Reuters

 ?? — AFP
— AP ?? The burning fuselage of an F/ A- 18 Hornet lies smoulderin­g after crashing into a residentia­l building in Virginia Beach, Virginia, on Friday.
— AFP — AP The burning fuselage of an F/ A- 18 Hornet lies smoulderin­g after crashing into a residentia­l building in Virginia Beach, Virginia, on Friday.
 ??  ?? A Yemeni soldier stands on a hill overlookin­g Sana’a.
A Yemeni soldier stands on a hill overlookin­g Sana’a.

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