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Gulf Yemen

Southern Transitional Council declares self-rule in Yemen’s south

STC says it will take control of Aden’s port and airport



Fighters with Yemen's Southern Transitional Council deploy in the southern city of Aden on April 26, after the council declared self-rule in the south.
Image Credit: AFP

Aden: Yemen’s main southern separatist group announced early on Sunday it would establish self-rule in areas under its control, which the Yemeni government warned would have “catastrophic consequences”.

The STC deployed its forces on Sunday in Aden, the southern port which is the interim seat of the government ousted from the capital, Sana’a, by the Iran-aligned Al Houthi militia.

The STC is one of the main groups fighting against Al Houthis as part of a coalition. But the STC has clashed with government forces in the past.

In a statement, the STC announced emergency rule in Aden and all southern governorates, saying it would take control of Aden’s port and airport and other state institutions such as the central bank.

The government and southern regions of Shabwa, Hadhramout and Socotra, among the few areas under coalition control, issued separate statements rejecting the declaration.

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Yemen’s Foreign Minister Mohammed Al Hadhrami said the STC announcement constituted “a resumption of its armed insurgency” and a “rejection and complete withdrawal from the Riyadh agreement”, a deal which ended a previous stand-off between the STC and the government last year.

The STC “will bear alone the dangerous and catastrophic consequences for such an announcement”, he said in a statement.

STC Vice-President Hani Ali Brik accused the government of hampering the agreement. In a Twitter post, he reiterated accusations against President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi’s government of mismanagement and corruption, charges it denies.

Coronavirus truce

Yemen has been mired in violence since Al Houthis ousted Hadi’s government from power in Sanaa in late 2014, prompting the Saudi-led coalition to intervene.

The conflict has killed more than 100,000 people. The war has choked supply lines in the poorest Arabian peninsula nation, leaving millions of people on the brink of famine and dependent on international aid.

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The Saudi-led coalition has announced a unilateral ceasefire prompted by a UN plea to focus on the coronavirus pandemic. It extended the ceasefire on Friday for a month, but Al Houthis have not accepted the truce and violence has continued.

While Yemen has reported only one confirmed case of the novel coronavirus, aid groups fear a catastrophic outbreak should it spread among a malnourished population in a country with a shattered health system and little testing.

The United Nations is trying to convene virtual talks to forge a permanent truce, coordinate coronavirus efforts and agree on humanitarian and economic confidence-building measures to restart peace negotiations stalled since late 2018.

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