Factual. Independent. Impartial.
Support AAP with a free or paid subscription

Yemeni separatists appear to split amid Saudi-UAE rift

Saudi Arabia reacted after forces of the Southern Transitional Council advanced toward its border. (EPA PHOTO)

Yemen's main separatist group has appeared to split as some members announced it was disbanding, reflecting a feud ⁠between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates that was blown into the open by a separatist advance last month.

Saudi-backed fighters have largely retaken areas in southern and eastern Yemen seized by the UAE-backed Southern Transitional Council (STC) in December, and an STC delegation has travelled to the Saudi capital Riyadh for talks.

However, STC leader Aidarous al-Zubaidi fled Yemen on Wednesday instead ‌of joining the ​talks, with the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen saying the UAE had helped spirit him away on a ‍flight that was tracked to a military airport in Abu Dhabi.

One of the members who travelled to Riyadh for the talks said in a statement broadcast on Saudi state media on Friday that the group had decided to disband.

Aidarous al-Zubaidi
Southern Transitional Council leader Aidarous al-Zubaidi left southern Yemen this week. (AP PHOTO)

But the STC says it has had no communication with the delegation that initiated the talks under Saudi sponsorship.

A spokesperson who did not travel ​to Riyadh and is close to Zubaidi said any decision on ‌the group's fate can only be taken by the entire council, including its leader.

Any such decision would only be taken once the delegation in Riyadh "is ​released," he said.

Saudi Defence Minister Khalid bin Salman welcomed the dissolution decision as a "brave" one.

A conference would be ‍held in Saudi Arabia to discuss southern Yemeni issues with all groups invited, he said.

Yemen was already divided from 1967 until reunification in 1990.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE had previously worked together in a coalition battling the Iran-aligned Houthis in Yemen's civil war, a conflict which ​caused ​one of the world's worst humanitarian crises.

But the two ​most powerful countries in the Gulf have had sharp differences ​over issues ranging from geopolitics to oil output.

Their rivalry was exposed when the STC advanced to within reach of Yemen's border with Saudi Arabia, which Saudi authorities declared a threat to the country's security.

The STC on Friday called for mass protests in the southern cities of Aden and Mukalla, urging supporters to rally on Saturday in a show of "loyalty and steadfastness" amid the political crisis.

Authorities in Aden aligned with Yemen's Saudi-backed government later ordered a ban on demonstrations in the southern city, citing security concerns, according to an ‍official directive seen by Reuters.

with DPA

License this article

Sign up to read this article for free
Choose between a free or paid subscription to AAP News
Start reading
Already a member? Sign in here
Top stories on AAP right now