The Borneo Post

Yemen separatist­s seize de facto capital as charity suspends work

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ADEN: Separatist­s in warravaged Yemen have seized all but one district of the government’s de facto capital Aden, also laying siege to the isolated presidenti­al palace on the city’s southern outskirts on Tuesday.

Global charity Save the Children said it was suspending life-saving work in Aden as its staff were forced to hunker down amid gun battles that the Red Cross says have killed at least 36 people in the past three days.

A number of ministers fled the port city by boat on Monday night, docking in the district of Brega further west, a military source told AFP.

A port official confirmed their arrival, saying they were transporte­d to a base of the Saudiled coalition which backs Yemen’s government.

But the ministers returned to Aden before dawn, after receiving guarantees from the coalition that the presidenti­al palace would not be stormed, a government source said.

The source said Saudi Arabia and its coalition allies are now in talks with southern separatist­s and with Yemen’s government, which Riyadh supports in the war against Iran-backed Huthi rebels.

The separatist­s, who advocate for self-rule in southern Yemen, now control seven of Aden’s eight districts.

Forces loyal to the government of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi hold the large northern district of Dar Saad, while ministers remain in the besieged presidenti­al palace near the coast.

Hadi’s government has accused the separatist­s of attempting a coup in Aden, opening yet another front in the country’s devastatin­g conflict.

Save the Children on Tuesday said it was suspending critical humanitari­an work in Aden out of fear for the safety of its staff.

“Our staff are forced to shelter at home and in bunkers while gun battles rage outside,” Yemen Country Director Tamer Kirolos said, saying children are ‘dying every day from preventabl­e causes’ like hunger, cholera and diphtheria.

“Aden was a relative refuge amidst the fighting in Yemen, but now that too has been shattered,” Kirolos said. “How many more innocent children must have their lives destroyed before the world takes notice?”

The southern port city of Aden has served as the government’s base since 2014, when the Iranbacked Huthi rebels – who hail from northern Yemen – took control of the capital Sanaa.

While President Hadi now resides in Riyadh, two military officials said Prime Minister Ahmed bin Dagher and a number of senior government figures remain in the Aden presidenti­al palace.

For three years, Hadi’s Saudibacke­d administra­tion was allied with the separatist­s, driving the Huthi rebels out of the south and back to their northern stronghold­s.

But tension between the allies began to surface in April when Hadi dismissed cabinet minister Hani Breik and Aden’s governor in a move widely seen as reflecting divisions among his supporters.

Tensions boiled over into armed clashes between the separatist­s and pro-government forces on Sunday, fuelling chaos in the impoverish­ed Arabian Peninsula country where a civil war has already left thousands dead and millions on the brink of starvation.

Under the self-proclaimed Southern Transition­al Council (STC), the separatist­s have gained traction since April in their push for self-rule, demanding the reinstatem­ent of South Yemen as an independen­t entity.

The STC this month called on Hadi to make changes in his government, accusing him of corruption and mismanagem­ent.

The clashes have sparked fears of a repeat of the 1986 South Yemen civil war, a failed socialist coup which killed thousands in just six days and helped pave the way for the 1991 unificatio­n of South and North Yemen. — AFP

 ??  ?? Smoke billows in Aden as fighters from the separatist Southern Transition­al Council move closer to taking full control of the southern city. — AFP photo
Smoke billows in Aden as fighters from the separatist Southern Transition­al Council move closer to taking full control of the southern city. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? A handout picture shows Rouhani (centre), Iranian vice-president Eshaq Jahangiri (left) and Hassan Khomeini (right), the grandson of the founder of Iran’s Islamic Republic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, at the shrine of the revolution­ary leader Khomeini...
A handout picture shows Rouhani (centre), Iranian vice-president Eshaq Jahangiri (left) and Hassan Khomeini (right), the grandson of the founder of Iran’s Islamic Republic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, at the shrine of the revolution­ary leader Khomeini...

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