The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Huthis refuse to cede Yemen power in face of ‘threats’

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SANAA: The Shiite militia that seizedpowe­rinSanaasa­idSunday it will not cave in to ‘threats’ after Yemen’s Gulf neighbours urged the UN to act forcefully against its takeover.

“The Yemeni people won’t cede power in the face of threats,” spokesman Mohammed Abdulsalam said, quoted by the official Saba news agency, which the Shiite Huthi militia now controls.

Abdulsalam insisted that Yemenis were “engaged in a process of self-determinat­ion free of any (foreign) tutelage”.

Yemen’s Gulf neighbours on Saturday urged the internatio­nal community to act forcefully over the deteriorat­ing security situation in the Arabian Peninsula country, including possible military interventi­on.

The United Nations Security Council is expected to adopt a resolution on Sunday urging the Huthis to step aside, release government officials and begin UN-brokered negotiatio­ns, diplomats said.

Calling for the Huthis to act “immediatel­y and unconditio­nally,” the draft resolution demands they “withdraw their forces f rom government institutio­ns... and relinquish government and security institutio­ns”.

The Huthis seized Sanaa in September before tightening their grip and prompting Westernbac­ked President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi to tender his resignatio­n.

They dissolved parliament and installed a “presidenti­al council” to run Yemen on February 6, sparking security concerns that saw several Arab and Western

The Yemeni people won’t cede power in the face of threats.

countries close their embassies and evacuate diplomats.

On Sunday the militia spokesman denounced as “provocativ­eblackmail”demands for the Huthis to relinquish power.

The withdrawal of ambassador­s “ref lects the panic that has hit some political forces which aren’t betting on the people... and their dignity, but on foreign” countries, said Abdulsalam.

“These embassies are here to oversee the interests of their own countries and not those of the (Yemeni) people,” he added.

Among the countries that have closed their embassies and pulled out their staff are Britain, France, Germany and the United States. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have taken similar action.

Yemen is home to al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, regarded by the United States as the network’s deadliest branch and which claimed a January 7 attack on French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in which 12 people were killed.

The country has seen a rise in unrest since an Arab Spring-inspired uprising forced former strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh to step down in February 2012.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has warned that Yemen is falling apart and called for Hadi to be reinstated. — AFP

Mohammed Abdulsalam, spokesman

 ??  ?? Armed Houthis gather around the wreckage of a vehicle set a blaze by angry protesters after the Houthis fired on them in Yemen’s central town of Ibb. — Reuters photo
Armed Houthis gather around the wreckage of a vehicle set a blaze by angry protesters after the Houthis fired on them in Yemen’s central town of Ibb. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? A Syrian child sits in the back of a truck loaded with furniture as residents collect what’s left of their belongings from their apartments, following months of shelling by regime forces in the besieged rebel held area of Douma, north east of the...
A Syrian child sits in the back of a truck loaded with furniture as residents collect what’s left of their belongings from their apartments, following months of shelling by regime forces in the besieged rebel held area of Douma, north east of the...

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