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Yemen Residents Protest Poor Living Conditions, Storm Aden Presidential Palace

  Hundreds of angry Yemenis stormed the presidential palace in Aden on Tuesday protesting poor living conditions in the war-torn country but were eventually pushed … Continue reading Yemen Residents Protest Poor Living Conditions, Storm Aden Presidential Palace


Protesters, some raising the old flag of South Yemen, gather to demonstrate against deteriorating services and economic conditions, outside the internationally-recognised Yemeni government’s headquarters at al-Maashiq Palace in the Crater district of the southern port city of Aden on March 16, 2021. Saleh Al-OBEIDI / AFP
Protesters, some raising the old flag of South Yemen, gather to demonstrate against deteriorating services and economic conditions, outside the internationally-recognized Yemeni government’s headquarters at al-Maashiq Palace in the Crater district of the southern port city of Aden on March 16, 2021. PHOTO: Saleh Al-OBEIDI / AFP

 

Hundreds of angry Yemenis stormed the presidential palace in Aden on Tuesday protesting poor living conditions in the war-torn country but were eventually pushed back peacefully, an AFP correspondent said.

Protesters, including retired military and security officers, marched in the southern port city, the de facto capital where the internationally-recognized government is based.

“Revolution, revolution in the south,” they shouted.

Palace guards shot into the air but protesters continued to march in.

The crowd remained in the building for over an hour before dispersing.

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A government official told AFP that Yemeni and Saudi forces escorted to safety members of the cabinet, including Prime Minister Maeen Abdulmalik Saeed, to the military intelligence building on the palace grounds.

Protesters told AFP that they were angry over a lack of services and a delay in the payment of salaries.

Some carried flags of the southern separatist movement.

Protesters gather to demonstrate against deteriorating services and economic conditions, outside the internationally-recognised Yemeni government’s headquarters at al-Maashiq Palace in the Crater district of the southern port city of Aden on March 16, 2021. PHOTO: Saleh Al-OBEIDI / AFP

 

Yemen’s government was formed in December under a Riyadh-sponsored power-sharing agreement between ministers loyal to President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi and supporters of the secessionist Southern Transitional Council.

Both are technically fighting the Iran-backed Huthi rebels, who control the capital Sanaa in the north.

But the STC has sought to restore South Yemen’s independence from the north. The two sides unified in 1990.

Aden residents claim the new government has not done anything to remedy price inflation or repeated power cuts.

Yemen has been embroiled in a civil war between the government — backed by a Saudi-led military coalition — and the Huthi rebels since 2014, pushing the country to the brink of famine.

Tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians, have been killed and millions displaced in the conflict, which has crippled the economy and healthcare system.

The UN calls Yemen the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

AFP