
UAE welcomes Saudi efforts to support security in Yemen amid STC advance
UAE welcomes Saudi efforts to support security in Yemen amid STC advance Statement comes day after Saudi Arabia told Yemeni separatists to withdraw from eastern governorates seized this month. The United Arab Emirates has welcomed Saudi âArabian efforts âto support security and stability in Yemen and remains committed to backing stability in the country, the UAEâs Ministry of Foreign Affairs said. The UAE statement on Friday came a day after Saudi Arabia said it hopes Yemenâs main southern separatist group, the â Southern Transitional Council (STC), will end an escalation and withdraw its forces from the eastern provinces of Hadramout and al-Mahra. Recommended Stories list of 3 items list 1 of 3 Analysis: Yemenâs future after the separatist STCâs expansion eastwards list 2 of 3 Yemenâs government, Houthis agree to exchange thousands of prisoners list 3 of 3 Saudi Arabia demands Yemeni separatists leave seized governorates The STC, which previously received military and financial backing from the UAE, pushed the âSaudi-backed, internationally recognised government from its headquarters in Aden while âclaiming broad control across the south earlier this month. âThe UAE reaffirmed its steadfast commitment to supporting all endeavours aimed at strengthening stability and development in Yemen,â âthe Emirati Foreign â Ministry said in its statement. On December 12, a joint Saudi-Emirati military delegation arrived in Aden to discuss measures aimed at defusing tensions in the country. Saudi Arabia âsaid the teams were sent to make âthe ânecessary arrangementsâ to ensure the return of STC forces to their previous positions outside the two provinces, adding that the efforts were still in progress. The STC advance has threatened to prompt a confrontation within a fragile coalition that has been battling the Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemenâs north for a decade. The separatists were initially part of the alliance that intervened in Yemen in 2015 against the âHouthis. But the group has turned â on the government and sought self-rule in the south. Yemen has already been marred by a civil war since 2014, with the Houthis controlling the northern part of âthe country, including the capital Sanaa, after forcing the Saudi-backed government to flee south. Situated between Saudi Arabia and an important shipping route on the âRed Sea, Yemen was split into northern and southern states until 1990.
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