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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Rebel alliance crumbling in Yemen

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SANAA: The rebel alliance controlling Yemen’s capital appeared to be crumbling on Saturday as a strongman opposed to the internationally recognised government reached out to the Gulf Arab coalition fighting the insurgents.


The rift within rebel ranks has raised fears of a new front in an already devastating three-year war that has claimed thousands of lives and triggered a major humanitarian crisis in Yemen.


The overture by former president Ali Abdullah Saleh follows a wave of deadly clashes between his supporters and Ansar Allah fighters that has left dozens dead or wounded in Sanaa.


The former enemies joined ranks in 2014 to seize the capital and drive out president Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, whose government has taken refuge in the country’s south.


But their fragile alliance has shown signs of unravelling for months and talks between them on Friday failed to broker a truce.


Saleh said on Saturday that he was ready to talk to the Gulf Arab coalition


if it lifts a crippling blockade imposed on the impoverished country last month after a rebel missile was shot down near Riyadh.


“I call on our brothers in neighbouring countries... to stop their aggression and lift the blockade... and we will turn the page,” he said in a televised speech.


“We vow to our brothers and neighbours that, after a ceasefire is in place and the blockade is lifted... we will hold dialogue directly through the legitimate authority represented by our parliament.”


The Ansar Allah quickly hit back, accusing Saleh of staging a “coup against our alliance”.


His speech had “exposed the deception of those who claim to stand against aggression,” Ansar Allah spokesman said in a statement carried by the Al Masirah TV.


The Yemen war has claimed more


than 8,750 lives since Gulf Arab coalition and its allies joined the Hadi government’s fight against the rebels in 2015, triggering what the United Nations has described as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.


Nearly one million people have been infected by cholera in Yemen this year, including more than 2,200 people who have died, according to the World Health Organization.


Saleh loyalists and rebel fighters continued to clash on Saturday afternoon in Sanaa, where violence has left at least 40 fighters dead or wounded since Wednesday according to rebel chief Abdulmalik al Huthi.


Saleh has accused the Ansar Allah of seeking to monopolise power and the rebels have accused the strongman of treason over his suspected contacts with the Gulf Arab coalition.


The coalition on Saturday welcomed Saleh’s offer of talks, a move the Al Masirah TV said showed the coalition’s “faith” that the former president would reverse alliances.


“The decision by (Saleh’s) General People’s Congress to take the lead and their choice to side with their people will free Yemen of... militias,” the coalition said in a statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency.


— AFP


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