Yemeni president demands Houthis quit Sanaa; US evacuates remaining forces

Anti-Huthi protesters demonstrate to show support for Yemen's President Abdu-Rabbu Mansour Hadi on Saturday.
Anti-Huthi protesters demonstrate to show support for Yemen's President Abdu-Rabbu Mansour Hadi on Saturday.
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Agencies, Aden :
Yemen’s embattled President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi pledged on Saturday to fight Iran’s influence in his violence-wracked country, accusing the Shia Huthi militia of importing Tehran’s ideology.
Mr Hadi lashed out at the Iran-backed militia a day after multiple suicide bombings at Huthi mosques claimed by the self-styled Islamic State (IS) group killed 142 and wounded 351 others.
The country is on the brink of a civil war with a deepening political impasse and an increasingly explicit territorial division along sectarian lines, amid rising violence pitting Shia militia against Sunni tribes and Al Qaeda militants.
By claiming its first attack in Yemen, the IS group is seeking to exploit the chaos gripping the country where its rival Al Qaeda traditionally has been the dominant militant organisation.
The Huthis, who seized Sanaa in September, vowed to take further “revolutionary steps” following Friday’s blasts.
In his first televised speech since he fled to Aden from house arrest in militia-held Sanaa, Mr Hadi said he would ensure that “the Yemeni republic flag will fly on the Marran mountain in (the northern Huthi stronghold) Saada, instead of the Iranian flag”. “The Iranian Twelver pattern that has been agreed upon between the Huthis and those who support them will not be accepted by Yemenis.
Yemeni President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi accused the Iranian-allied Houthi militia on Saturday of staging a coup against him and appealed to the United Nations for “urgent intervention”, even as the United States evacuated its remaining forces.
In a call to arms from the southern city of Aden, where he fled last month after escaping house arrest by the Houthis, Hadi called on them to pull their forces out of state ministries, return weapons seized from the army and quit the capital, Sanaa.
The U.N. Security Council was set to meet on Sunday to discuss Yemen after Hadi appealed to the 15-member body for assistance “in all available means to stop this aggression”.
Yemen has been hurtling towards civil war since last year when the Houthis seized Sanaa and advanced into Sunni Muslim areas, leading to clashes with local tribes and energizing a southern separatist movement.
US officials said Washington had evacuated its remaining personnel from Yemen, including about 100 special operations forces, because of deteriorating security, marking a further setback in U.S. efforts against a powerful local al Qaeda branch.
 The last major U.S. military contingent in Yemen had been stationed at the al-Annad air base in the south, according to national security sources.
State Department spokesman Jeff Rathke said all remaining U.S. staff had been “temporarily relocated” but insisted that Washington would “continue to actively monitor terrorist threats emanating from Yemen and … take action to disrupt continuing, imminent threats to the United States”.
Washington for years has been waging a campaign of deadly drone strikes against al Qaeda operatives in Yemen. U.S. officials say the unmanned aircraft fly out of a base in neighboring Saudi Arabia.
Only last September U.S. President Barack Obama touted the partnership with Yemen as a model in counter-terrorism.
But the subsequent collapse of Hadi’s government disrupted some U.S. counterterrorism operations, and the closing of the U.S. embassy in Sanaa last month took a further toll.
 Despite that, Hadi sounded a defiant note from his base in the south on Saturday, threatening action against the Houthis’ northern stronghold.
“We shall deliver the country to safety and raise Yemen’s flag on Mount Marran in Saadeh instead of the Iranian flag,” he said in a televised speech, his first since reaching Aden. Iran is an ally of the Houthis, who belong to a Shi’ite Muslim sect.
The Houthis, in a statement from their Supreme Revolutionary Committee, did not directly respond to the speech but called for a “general mobilization” of the armed forces against a “dirty war” they said was being waged by militias loyal to Hadi.
Hadi’s flight to Aden has raised the prospect of armed confrontation between rival governments based in the north and south, creating chaos that could be exploited by the Yemen-based regional wing of al Qaeda.
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