Los Angeles Times

Ex-Yemen leader killed

Ali Abdullah Saleh dies as fighting rages between his backers, their former allies.

- By Zayd Ahmed and Alexandra Zavis alexandra.zavis@latimes.com Special correspond­ent Ahmed reported from Sana and Times staff writer Zavis from Beirut. Special correspond­ents Nabih Bulos in Beirut and Ramin Mostaghim in Tehran contribute­d to this report.

SANA, Yemen — Ali Abdullah Saleh, the deposed strongman who led Yemen for more than three decades and colluded with Iran-aligned rebels to topple his successor, was killed Monday as fighting raged between his followers and their former allies, according to officials on both sides.

Saleh’s death removes one of the most enduring and cunning political figures in Yemen, injecting new uncertaint­y into a devastatin­g civil war just days after he turned against the rebels, known as Houthis, and made overtures to the Saudi Arabia-led coalition that sided with the country’s internatio­nally recognized government.

Even after he was swept from office five years ago in an “Arab Spring” uprising, Saleh remained a force in Yemen, retaining the loyalty of the Republican Guard and other elements of the security forces.

The Houthis announced Saleh’s death after reports of an explosion at his family’s compound, but there were conflictin­g accounts about the circumstan­ces. Houthi officials said their forces ambushed Saleh’s convoy as he tried to flee the capital, Sana, but members of his political party, the General People’s Congress, said a sniper shot him.

Grisly video circulatin­g on social media purported to show gunmen loading Saleh’s body, wrapped in a floral blanket, onto the back of a pickup truck and shouting, “God is great!”

Saleh appeared to have sustained a wound to the head, and his shirt was stained with blood. The authentici­ty of the short clip could not be independen­tly verified.

The Houthis’ leader, Abdel-Malek Houthi, hailed Saleh’s death as “the fall of the conspiracy of cunning and betrayal,” saying Saudi Arabia and its allies were dealt a “resounding, historic defeat.”

In a televised address from the Saudi capital, Riyadh, Yemen’s exiled president, Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi, sought to rally Saleh’s forces, saying his government would support any uprising in Sana.

Saleh, who once compared leading Yemen to “dancing on the heads of snakes,” was regarded as a supreme tactician, making and breaking alliances with ruthless skill to ensure his political survival.

As president, he was an important ally to the United States in the fight against Al Qaeda’s affiliate in Yemen and clashed repeatedly with the Houthis. But after he was toppled, he struck a deal with the rebels.

Rogue elements of the military still loyal to Saleh provided critical support to the Houthis when they charged out of their northern stronghold­s and took over the capital in 2014.

The Houthis’ sudden advance alarmed Saudi Arabia, which views the rebels as proxies of its archrival, Iran. With backing from the United States, it formed a military alliance with the United Arab Emirates and other Persian Gulf nations to restore Hadi to power.

When clashes erupted in the capital last week between the Houthis and Saleh’s forces, many here assumed the coalition had a hand in the unraveling of the rebel alliance.

In a televised address Saturday, Saleh blamed the Houthis for a crippling blockade imposed by Saudi Arabia and its allies and said he was ready for talks with the coalition.

The coalition welcomed his appeal to “open a new page,” raising hopes among some diplomats and analysts that it might be possible to break the deadlock that has stymied efforts to negotiate a political solution to a multi-sided war that has killed more than 10,000 people, displaced over 3 million and pushed the Arab world’s poorest nation to the brink of famine.

With Saleh’s death, peace in Yemen appears even further out of reach.

“The road map for peace is now obsolete,” said Adam Baron, a Yemen analyst at the European Council on Foreign Relations. “It’s clear there will be more conflict … and greater suffering for Yemenis is much more likely.”

As coalition warplanes streaked over Sana late Monday, residents braced for what many feared would be a push by the coalition into the capital.

“Now we don’t know what will happen,” said Mona Saleh (a common last name here), a 30-year-old schoolteac­her who recalled a time when the former president brought a measure of stability to Yemen after previous civil wars. “We have been hearing airstrikes all day, and citizens were already suffering — no salaries, not enough food, and prices have increased in an unpreceden­ted way.”

The only choices left, she added, were “to die by airstrikes, armed clashes or starve.”

At least 125 people have been killed and 230 injured since the infighting began in the capital on Wednesday, the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross said.

 ?? Mohammed Huwais AFP/Getty Images ?? HOUTHI REBELS gather outside the Sana residence of former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who ruled Yemen for more than 30 years and then tried to topple his successor after being swept from office in 2012.
Mohammed Huwais AFP/Getty Images HOUTHI REBELS gather outside the Sana residence of former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who ruled Yemen for more than 30 years and then tried to topple his successor after being swept from office in 2012.
 ?? Khaled Fazaa AFP/Getty Images ?? SALEH, seen in 2006, had condemned the Houthis on Saturday and said he was ready for talks.
Khaled Fazaa AFP/Getty Images SALEH, seen in 2006, had condemned the Houthis on Saturday and said he was ready for talks.

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