Yemen Leader Moved to 'Secure Location' as Rebels Advance

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Yemeni rebels closed in on President Abedrabo Mansour Hadi as they seized Aden's airport Wednesday, prompting warnings of a full-blown conflict and pleas for urgent foreign intervention.

The escalating turmoil in Yemen -- which borders Saudi Arabia and lies close to key shipping routes -- pushed up world oil prices on fears it could threaten Middle Eastern petroleum producers.

Acting foreign minister Riyad Yassin warned in Egypt that the fall of second city Aden would mean the "start of civil war" as he drummed up Arab military support for Hadi.

His comments came as army units switched allegiance to the rebels and seized Aden's international airport.

Aides to Hadi said however that the Western-backed president had been taken to a safe haven "within Aden", where he fled last month.

One of his advisers said former president Ali Abdullah Saleh was the man pulling the strings as the rebels advanced.

"The Huthis are puppets in the hands of Saleh," the Riyadh-based Yassin Makkawi told Agence France-Presse.

Washington said it had been in touch with Hadi and that he was no longer at his residence, but it was unable to say where he was.

Yemen has been gripped by growing turmoil since the Shiite Huthi rebels launched a power takeover in Sanaa in February.

The strife has raised fears Yemen could be torn apart by a proxy war between Shiite Iran, accused of backing the rebels, and Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia, which supports Hadi.

- 'Dagger' in Saudi side -

The acting foreign minister Yassin warned that domination by Iran would be a "dagger in the side of Saudi Arabia and the rest of countries of the Gulf."

His comments came after the Huthis said they had captured his defense minister in their push southwards.

Missiles were fired from an unidentified warplane at Hadi's complex in Aden, but only hit an abandoned building, a presidential security official said.

Large crowds of Aden residents could be seen running to take up arms at a weapons depot in preparation for the expected rebel advance.

As the security situation worsened, Aden's international airport suspended operations.

In the afternoon, the 39th Armoured Brigade posted near Aden airport took control of the facility in support of the rebels, witnesses said. 

Rebel television said the unit had "secured the airport."

Hadi appealed to the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday to "shoulder its responsibilities... to safeguard Yemen from sliding into more chaos and destruction."

His plea followed a warning from U.N. envoy Jamal Benomar that Yemen was sliding towards a "civil war."

Rebels seized a key airbase 50 kilometers (30 miles) north of Aden on Wednesday, days after U.S. military personnel were evacuated.

Yemen has allowed Washington to wage a long-standing drone war against al-Qaida in the country.

The Huthis took control of al-Anad airbase following "limited clashes" with pro-Hadi forces, an official said.

Rebels advanced deep into Lahj province, adjacent to Aden and where they said they had seized Hadi's defense minister, General Mahmud al-Subaihi.

- Hadi ally seized -

Subaihi, who escaped house arrest in Sanaa this month, had been seen as a vital ally of Hadi in charge of organizing Aden's defense lines.

Dozens of people have been killed as the Huthis backed by troops allied to former strongman Saleh, have clashed with pro-Hadi forces as they push southwards.

Saleh, who resigned in 2012 following nationwide protests, has been accused of backing the Shiite rebels as he seeks to regain influence.

Yemen is increasingly divided between a north controlled by the Huthis and a south dominated by Hadi supporters.

In a letter to the Security Council Tuesday, Hadi called for a binding U.N. resolution asking countries to provide immediate support "by all means and measures" to protect Yemen.

He voiced concerns that al-Qaida will "seize the current instability to spark further chaos."

He referred to an unspecified "missile capability looted from the legitimate authority," and asked the Security Council to take control of the missiles.

The Council has so far only released a declaration of support for Hadi, during an emergency meeting the president requested Sunday.

Diplomats said no new meeting has been planned at this time.

Yassin told reporters in Egypt that he would call for "urgent intervention" at an Arab League summit due to start on Saturday.

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal has warned that Arab countries might take action "to protect interests from Huthi aggression."

Comments 25
Default-user-icon the_roar (Guest) 25 March 2015, 10:07

FT = the most informative poster this site has ever seen by a country mile
No wonder his posts are removed within minutes of them being posted.

Default-user-icon southern huthi (Guest) 25 March 2015, 11:22

very well said @southern

Missing humble 25 March 2015, 11:31

Unbelievably stupid and inept.
Habileh x 10000000000000000000000000

Missing humble 25 March 2015, 11:33

All those who support Ebola are agents to Iran, the Caporal supports Ebola; therefore the caporal is an agent to Iran.

Thumb Machia 25 March 2015, 11:41

Yemen is such a poor country. Its population is wretched and illiterate, (The overall literacy rate for the population of ages 15 and older was 49 percent in 2007).
Per capita nominal income is USD 1,418 while its Saudi neighbour is USD 25,401.
These Arab civil wars are just non-sensical and Western politicians have only one thing to say: "it is going to take a very long time..."
Whether the West or Israel encourages this crazy Sunni-Shia war is not important, the crazy thing is that we go along with it.
Enough blood has been spilled! Time for security and prosperity. Wake up Arab world, Wake Up!

Thumb Machia 25 March 2015, 11:42

For more information on what is happening in Yemen, I encourage you to watch this brilliant documentary:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-31994769

Thumb Machia 25 March 2015, 15:27

What is happening in Syria, Iraq and Yemen is really sad. Thousands of our people dying for nothing. No future for generations to come. Violence, corruption, poverty, lack of education and superstition is the norm.
In Lebanon, unfortunately, stupid and blind sectarianism, poverty and the lack of leadership are eating up our country and its future.
What a disaster. When will we ever wake up.

Default-user-icon + oua nabka + (Guest) 25 March 2015, 13:08

hope KSA goes to war with yemen and let them taste what they do to other countries
god bless democracy

Thumb Machia 25 March 2015, 15:38

Bigjohn, you sound like a Mossad agent who wants to create havoc in the Arab world.
Shame on you.
The majority of Arab citizens, whether Sunni, Shia, Christian, Zaydis, Alawites, Jews, etc. want peace, prosperity and a better future for their children.
Your discourse is unacceptable and sick!

Thumb ex-fpm 25 March 2015, 15:48

Yemen is a lost case. The intransigence and laxed attitude of the Arab countries allowed the Iranians to control Yemen, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. Yemen is now officially in a civil "sectarian" war and its fate will be no different than Syria or Iraq.

Thumb Machia 25 March 2015, 16:00

Please watch this documentary http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-31994769

Syria, Iraq and Yemen are truly lost.
Years of useless dictatorships, US plots and invasions, and very short sighted Arab leadership led to these failed states.
It is so sad.

Missing ArabDemocrat.com 25 March 2015, 16:33

BigJohn - you mean Zaidis and not Shia, They were not marginalized at all. Indeed, the Zaidi minority ruled Yemen for much of its recent history. The former president who ruled Yemen and much of the army leadership are Zaidis.

Thumb Mystic 25 March 2015, 18:07

Hadi moved again, not very heroic.

Thumb Mystic 25 March 2015, 19:17

Adens Airport have fallen to the Ansurallah fighters. Once again, the wahabis failed.

Thumb Mystic 25 March 2015, 20:03

texy, Qalamoun mountains has never been fully taken, nobody ever said that, neither the Resistance or anyone here. The takfiris have their enclave in the mountains, and they had that since Yabroud fell.

Yes Adens airport have now fallen to the Ansurallah, let that be a lesson to all you people. The Wahabis ways of controlling things are over, that goes from Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Yemen and Bahrain too soon inshallah.

Thumb Machia 25 March 2015, 20:54

Stop it all of you. Shame on you. People are dying for nothing and instead of sticking together as moderates, (and yes we are all moderates on this forum, and educated), we fight over sectarian matters.
Let us be a light in this dark Middle East. Let's show them how human beings and citizens should behave. Stop fighting because at the end of the day, we will all lose. If we stand united, we all win.
Let's see what unites us as Lebanese, instead of what divides us and you will realize that we the citizens of Lebanon have 99% the same interests.
The rest is emotional politics that only divides us and let's us sink into civil strife.
So stop this useless to and fro. Let's move on and try to build a real country.

Thumb Machia 25 March 2015, 21:37

anonymetexasusa...I wish we were debating those issues.
Just read the forums, it is all about hate, sectarianism, etc. No one is debating any of those rights.
No one is debating what democracy means, what civil rights mean, all that is being debated on these forums is based on emotional and sectarian politics.

Thumb Machia 25 March 2015, 21:48

Of course. I would add meritocracy, transparency, bureaucratic efficiency and secularism

Thumb Machia 25 March 2015, 21:51

But just read the comments on all those naharnet news stories. It is all sectarian insults. It is all based on instinct that is tribal and that is based on basic animal survival.
It is like watching a National Geographic documentary.

Thumb Machia 25 March 2015, 21:58

I knew that would be your next question and that is your survival instinct kicking in and this is why I added the National Geographic comment in my last post.
Let's get out of this catch 22 better known in Lebanon as "qosset breek al zeit".

Thumb liberty 26 March 2015, 04:34

machia, for someone who wants aoun as president despite aoun's publicly admitting he is part of the iranian axis and despite aoun's blatant obstructionist stance re the presidential elections, it is hypocritical of you to talk about democracy and transparency.

Thumb Machia 26 March 2015, 07:19

It is really sad to see smart people with mantis instincts when it comes to politics.

Missing people-power 25 March 2015, 22:58

The great General Solemani with his thousands of Houthi militias, and thousands of Iraqi soldiers, is not able to take the city of Tikrit in Iraq, because of resistance from a few hundred Daesh takfiris, so now Solemani is begging for help from the Amrikans ..... priceless!

Thumb liberty 26 March 2015, 02:38

The Saudi Air Force is already in action as of 7 pm eastern time wiping off this iranian sectarian threat trying to spread to the eastern part of the Kingdom.

Thumb liberty 26 March 2015, 02:39

lol lol