Yemeni riot police disperse Houthi protesters
Yemen’s Shiite rebels known as the Houthis have been pushing for the government’s resignation, accusing it of corruption
Yemeni riot police used tear gas and water cannon to disperse Shiite Muslim Houthi protesters blocking the road between the capital and Yemen’s main airport on Sunday, in an escalation of weeks of protests.
Warplanes also bombed armed Houthi rebels in al-Jawf province, killing 13 of them, according to government sources.
Tens of thousands of Houthis have spent weeks camping around Sanaa in protest at the government against which they have fought, on and off, for a decade in northwest Yemen.
On Sunday morning, they set up tents blocking the main road to Sanaa's airport and the Interior Ministry. The government's use of tear gas is the most decisive response to the protesters since the recent unrest began. Houthi representatives said several protesters had suffered from tear gas inhalation.
Fighting has been going on intermittently for months in the north between the Houthis, who carry the name of their leaders' clan, and Sanaa-backed tribes, but the government had paused air strikes to give truce talks a chance.
The Houthis, who follow the small Zaidi branch of Shiite Islam, first launched their uprising against the central government in Sunni-dominated Yemen in 2004, and fought several bitter wars against it in the years that followed.
“We hold the government responsible for the repercussions of its aggression, and we emphasize our people’s right to self-defense by all means if it persists in its aggression,” Houthi spokesman Mohammed Abdul Salam said in a statement on Sunday.
Attempts to involve the Houthis in mainstream politics in the aftermath of the 2011 Arab Spring protests and the ousting of Yemen's long-time Ali Abdullah Saleh, an arch-enemy of the Houthis, have failed, and the group has returned to its more radical and isolationist ways.
The Houthis, who say they want to topple the government, have centered their current protest on a call for recent fuel price rises to be reversed. They rejected a broad compromise proposal on fuel subsidies made by President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi last week.
The United States and Yemen’s Sunni Muslim neighbor Saudi Arabia fear for the stability of Yemen, which is also fighting an insurgency by al Qaeda militants and harbors many of the same sectarian rifts that have set other Arab countries ablaze.
Iran’s Foreign Ministry denied a suggestion by Hadi that Iran was helping to incite the turmoil. It said Iran “backs peaceful attempts to realize legislative aspirations ... (and) participation of all groups in the political process.”
The Yemeni government and Iran’s rivals among the Sunni-ruled Gulf states have long accused Shiite Iran of interfering in Yemen, something that Tehran and the Houthis deny.
“Some do not wish security, stability and an exit from the crisis for Sanaa, but want to light a fire like in Damascus, Baghdad and Libya,” Hadi told tribal leaders on Saturday.
The state news agency Saba said he had urged Iran to “exercise reason and logic in dealing with the Yemeni people, and.. deal with (all) the people and not just one class, group or sect.”
The president wants the Houthis to join a new unity government and announced fuel price cuts of about 30 percent last week.
The rebels rejected his compromise plan as “meaningless,” and a national consensus government dismissed last week remains in place pending progress in the truce talks.
-
Saudi Special Criminal Court to investigate five female 'terrorists'
These female terrorists allegedly used to get support and guidance from the commanders and members of the terrorist organization in Yemen and Afghanistan Middle East -
Yemen clashes between rebels, tribesmen kill 40
The officials said tribesmen have managed to take control of Houthi positions some 175 kilometers east of the capital Sanaa Middle East -
1900GMT: Panorama: What is the agenda of Yemen’s Houthi rebels?
News Bulletins -
Houthi rebel group blocks main roads in Yemen
The move is seen as an escalation of the standoff between Houthi rebels and President Abed Rabbo Mansour Middle East -
Yemen restoring fuel subsidy Thursday in face of protests
A decision to slash the subsidies in July enraged backers of the Houthi militant group Business -
Al-Qaeda in Yemen executes three ‘spies’ for guiding drone strikes
The drone strikes have upset many Yemenis because of the civilians they have killed Middle East