Yemen: President Hadi hands over power to Presidential Council

Yemen’s president’s ousted controversial vice president’s transfer to Saudi Arabia war in the country.

“I am irrevocably transferring all my powers to this presidential council,” Yemeni President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi said in a televised address early this morning, the last day of peace talks in Riyadh.

Saudi Arabia, which has been intervening in Yemen since 2015 by backing government troops against Shiite rebel Houthis, has called on the presidency to “start negotiations with the Houthis under the auspices of the United Nations for a final and comprehensive solution.”

Yemen’s president has ousted Vice President Ali Mohsen al-Ahmad, a Sunni general hated by Shi’ite Houthi rebels for campaigning against their strongholds in northern Yemen and other parts of the country. his role in the 1994 North-South civil war.

On Saturday, following UN intervention, a ceasefire was declared in Yemen throughout Ramadan, offering a glimmer of hope for an end to the war that has caused one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world.

Based on this truce, which can be extended “with the consent” of the warring parties, it provides for the suspension of all land, air and naval military attacks.

At the same time, peace talks are being held in Saudi Arabia in the absence of the Houthis, who have refused to take part in negotiations on “hostile” territory.

The new presidential council will consist of eight members and will be chaired by Rasad al-Alimi, a former interior minister and advisor to Hady. Al-Alimi also has the support of Riyadh and close ties to the Islamist party Islah.

Among the vice-presidents will be the leader of the southern Yemeni separatist organization, the Southern Transitional Council, Aidarous al-Zubaidi, who is backed by the United Arab Emirates.

Hadi took over the presidency of Yemen in 2012 on the basis of a political transition plan backed by Gulf countries following the 2011 Arab Spring demonstrations that led to the resignation of former President Ali Abdullah Saleh.

In 2014, the Hadji government was ousted from Sanaa, which was occupied by the Houthis.

Following Khandi’s statement, Saudi Arabia announced that it would offer $ 3 billion in aid to the Yemeni government.

Riyadh, which last deposited money in the central bank in Aden in 2018, is trying to break free from this costly and unpopular war, which is widely seen as a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran that backs the Houthis. .

With nearly 380,000 dead, millions displaced and much of the country’s population on the brink of starvation, the war in Yemen has caused one of the worst humanitarian disasters in the world, according to the UN.

SOURCE: AMPE

Source: Capital

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