The Star Early Edition

Yemen premier prepares to flee as separatist­s take palace

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SANAA: Yemen’s prime minister was preparing to flee the country yesterday for Saudi Arabia after separatist­s seized the area around the presidenti­al palace in the southern port of Aden in fierce battles overnight, security officials said.

According to the officials, fighters loyal to the so-called Southern Transition­al Council fought all way to the gates of the Palace of Maashiq in the district of Crater in Aden, forcing President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi’s troops to abandon their positions. The officials said Hadi’s prime minister and several cabinet members would leave imminently for Riyadh.

The palace is the seat of Yemen’s internatio­nally backed government. The separatist forces did not enter the palace itself and were stopped by Saudi Arabian troops who have been guarding the palace for the past months.

However, a senior government official told Associated Press that Prime Minister Ahmed Obaid Bin Daghar and several ministers remain inside and the separatist­s have not seized the palace itself.

The official declined to say whether the prime minister was to leave Aden. The security officials and the government official spoke on condition of anonymity under regulation­s.

The fighting in Aden first erupted on Sunday, when a deadline issued by the separatist­s for the government to resign expired. Hadi, who himself is in self-imposed exile in Saudi Arabia, has described the separatist­s’ action as a “coup”.

The violence in Aden has killed at least 36 people and wounded 185 since Sunday, according to the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross.

It has also exposed deep divisions within the alliance between Hadi’s government and the Saudiled coalition. The two are fighting against Yemen’s Shia rebels, known as Houthis, who are in control of the country’s north. The war started in 2015 when the Houthis captured much of the northern region after overrunnin­g the capital, Sanaa.

The warring parties have been locked in a bloody stalemate for most of the last three years. Yemen’s war has left over 10 000 civilians dead and two million displaced, with the UN saying Yemen is facing the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis.

But within the Saudi-led coalition, allies from the United Arab Emirates have trained the separatist forces and empowered them over the past year, in a direct challenge to Hadi, who is in Riyadh.

The unfolding events in Aden have thrown Yemen into deeper uncertaint­y.

The US State Department has expressed concern and called upon all parties to “refrain from escalation and further bloodshed”. Washington backs the Saudi-led coalition.

“We also call for dialogue among all parties in Aden to reach a political solution,” the statement said.

“The Yemeni people are already facing a dire humanitari­an crisis. Additional divisions and violence within Yemen will only increase their suffering.”

 ??  ?? AHMED OBAID
AHMED OBAID

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