
Saudi Arabia demands Yemeni separatists leave seized governorates
Saudi Arabia demands Yemeni separatists leave seized governorates Riyadh calls seizure of oil-rich provinces âunjustified escalationâ as fragile anti-Houthi alliance shows cracks. Saudi Arabia has publicly called on Yemenâs main southern separatist group to withdraw from two eastern provinces they seized this month, in a move that threatens to deepen divisions within the regional coalition opposed to the Houthi rebels. Saudi Arabiaâs Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued the demand on Thursday, describing military operations by the Southern Transitional Council (STC) as an âunjustified escalationâ after the group took control of the oil-rich Hadramout and al-Mahra governorates earlier in December. Recommended Stories list of 2 items list 1 of 2 UN chief Guterres condemns Houthi detention of 10 more UN staff in Yemen list 2 of 2 Yemenâs government, Houthis agree to exchange thousands of prisoners âThe kingdom stresses the importance of cooperation among all Yemeni factions and components to exercise restraint and avoid any measures that could destabilise security and stability, which may result in undesirable consequences,â the Foreign Ministry warned. Saudi Arabia added that meditation efforts were under way, aimed at having the STCâs forces return to âtheir previous positions outside of the two governorates and handover the camps in those areasâ to the National Shield Forces. Riyadh said it remained hopeful the separatists would pull back âin an urgent and orderly mannerâ to restore stability. The STC, which has previously received military and financial backing from the United Arab Emirates (UAE), moved swiftly into the two provinces in early December, seizing key oil facilities, government buildings and border crossings with minimal resistance. The group also took over the presidential palace in Aden, the temporary seat of Yemenâs internationally recognised government. Saudi Arabia and the UAE have both backed the government against Iran-aligned Houthis during Yemenâs civil war since 2015. The STC is part of a broader coalition backed by Saudi Arabia, called the Presidential Leadership Council, which represents the country. While the two Gulf powers sent a joint delegation to Aden on December 12 to negotiate a resolution, those efforts have so far failed to produce a breakthrough. âCritical and existential junctureâ Saudi Arabia shares a 684km (425-mile) border with Hadramout and views the province as vital to its national security, while Oman has similar concerns about al-Mahra on its frontier. Both governorates host important trade routes and energy resources that the STC considers essential for establishing an independent southern state. The separatist group was formed in 2017 to restore South Yemen, which existed as an independent country between 1967 and 1990. Its leader, Aidarous al-Zubaidi, holds a seat on Yemenâs Presidential Leadership Council but has increasingly acted independently of the government he nominally serves. Instead of withdrawing, the STC has expanded operations into neighbouring Abyan province and declared that its ultimate goal was to seize the Yemeni capital Sanaa from the Houthis. Al-Zubaidi recently told supporters that the south stands at âa critical and existential junctureâ requiring work to build âthe institutions of the future South Arabian...
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