Yemen: Ex-President Ali Abdullah
Saleh killed
NEWS / HOUTHIS
READ MORE
Yemen: Who was Ali
Abdullah Saleh?
READ MORE
How did Yemen's
Houthi-Saleh alliance
collapse?
WATCH: How the Yemen conflict began (2:44)
OPINION
Yemen's fate was
sealed six years ago
by Noha
Aboueldahab
Yemen Houthis Middle East
SIGN UP
Yemen's ex-president Ali Abdullah
Saleh has been killed by Houthi rebels
near the capital, Sanaa, a development
expected to have major implications for
the war in the Arab world's poorest
country.
The death was first announced on
Monday by the Sanaa-based interior
ministry, controlled by Saleh's allies-
turned-foes , the Houthi rebel
movement.
His killing was later confirmed to Al
Jazeera by Saleh's political party,
the General People's Congress (GPC).
Footage circulating on social media
appeared to display a body resembling
Saleh, with one video showing how
armed militiamen used a blanket to
move the corpse into the back of a
pick-up truck.
There were earlier reports that the
Houthis blew up one of Saleh's houses,
after storming the property. Houthi
sources said Saleh was killed by the
rebels in a rocket-propelled grenade
and shooting attack on his car at a
checkpoint outside Sanaa.
Yasser al-Awadi, the GPC's assistant
secretary-general, was also killed.
In a statement
read out on a
Houthi television
network, the
interior ministry
announced the
"killing" of "Saleh and his supporters".
"This is after he and his men blockaded
the roads and killed civilians in a clear
collaboration with the enemy countries
of the coalition," the statement said.
The ministry also said its forces had
"taken over all the positions and
strongholds of the treacherous militia
in the capital, Sanna, and the
surrounding areas, as well as other
provinces in order to impose security".
Sources close to Saleh told Al Jazeera
that the head of the former president's
security detail, Hussein al-Hamidi, was
also killed, but did not provide further
details.
Overture to Saudi
Saleh was killed two days after he
publicly broke off ties with the Houthis,
amid intense street battles between the
rival factions that led to the killing of
dozens of people.
In a televised statement on Saturday,
the former president expressed his
openness to talks with a Saudi-led
coalition fighting the Houthi rebels, in
what the fighters called "a coup"
against their fragile alliance.
2 days before he was killed, this was ex
Yemeni president Saleh's last appearance
on his TV station calling on his supporters
to confront his former allies, the Houthis
facebook.com/Afash.Yemen/vi…
2:40 PM - Dec 4, 2017
5 2
Mohamed Yehia
@yeh1a
Earlier on Monday, a Sanaa-based
activist told Al Jazeera that the Houthis
had gained control of most of Sanaa
from Saleh's forces.
"Only small pockets remain," Hussain
Albukhaiti, who has close ties to the
Iranian-backed Houthis, added.
Albukhaiti said that fighters had
secured key areas south of the capital,
including the "very strategic" al-
Mesbahi residential area, which is
approximately 200 metres from Saleh's
home.
Houthi fighters seen in Sanaa on Monday [Khaled
Abdullah/Reuters]
'Shock and awe'
A dominant figure in Yemen, Saleh, 75,
ruled the country for more than three
decades before being deposed in 2012.
He remained, however, a key player in
the years that followed and played a
pivotal role in the country's ongoing
conflict.
The Houthis, who are believed to be
backed by Iran , stormed Sanaa in
September 2014. They seized control of
the city and eventually led President
Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who
succeeded Saleh in 2012, to flee to
Saudi Arabia.
In March 2015, a
Saudi-led
coalition
intervened to
reinstate Hadi's
government.
Three months
later, following Saudi-led coalition air
raids on his home in Sanaa, Saleh
officially announced for the first time
the establishment of his alliance with
the Houthis.
Speaking to Al Jazeera from
Sanaa, Hakim al-Masmari, editor-in-
chief of the Yemen Post, described
Saleh as "probably the most powerful
person" in Yemen and said the reports
of his death had left the country "in
shock and awe".
"You can not say this is the end of his
political movement, but it’s a very big
blow," he said. "But this is far from
over - Saleh was an icon in Yemen for
millions, and so his death will not go
slowly or unanswered."
The tactical alliance between Saleh and
the Houthis had often appeared fragile,
with both groups suspicious of each
other's ultimate motives and sharing
little ideological ground.
"This will not bring Yemen any closer to
an end in fighting," said al-Masmari.
"We can only be sure that the Houthis
are now united under one leadership.
Before there were two leaderships, two
different agendas, two different ways
how to win the war."
The war in
Yemen is the
worst
humanitarian
crisis in the
world, according
to the United
Nations, killing
at least 10,000
people and leading to widespread
hunger and disease.
Marwan Bishara, Al Jazeera's senior
political analyst, described Saleh's
death as "a major turning point in
Yemen's history".
"Saleh was a man for all seasons,
someone who was able for four
decades to change his political colours
and alliances according to
circumstances, up and until his death
just a few hours ago."
Why are British Muslim marriages unprotected by law? FEATURE / ISLAM MUSLIM MARRIAGE IN THE UK 60 percent Muslim marriages religious-only, unregistered 28 percent do not realise Islamic ceremony not legally recognised 66 percent know union has no legal status 50 percent do not intend to have marriage legalised - Source: Channel 4 survey Aina Khan Aina Khan is a journalist focusing on race, faith and identity. She's reading a masters in religion in politics at SOAS. @ ainajkhan United Kingdom Islam Europe, Maureen, right, was not entitled to financial support after her husband Rashid - the father of her child - passed away [Courtesy: Maureen] London, England - When Maureen wed her husband Rashid in a Muslim ceremony in 1973 in Bradford, she knew that should the relationship fall apart, she would not be entitled to share his assets. Her marriage was sanctified in the eyes of God, but in the eyes of the state it was "unregistered", not legal, and so financial protection...
Comments