Yemen’s Houthi militias fear ‘coup,’ says ousted president Saleh

Ali Abdullah Saleh
Ali Abdullah Saleh

Houthi militia decided to arrest Ali Abdullah Saleh and transfer him to Saada.


:: Yemen’s ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh said the country’s Houthi militias feared a “coup” but that there were no longer any tensions with them, despite strains in the past fortnight.

“There is no crisis and conflict at the moment,” the 75-year-old strongman said late Monday in an interview on Al-Yemen Al-Yom television, which his party controls.

On August 24, hundreds of thousands put on a show of force for Saleh at a rally marking the 35th anniversary of his Arab nationalist General People’s Congress (GPC) party.

“There were fears and suspicions that the rally would be a coup” against the Iran-backed Huthis, and “this is what their leaders told us,” said the former president.

Saleh said Houthi leaders told him there had been “an operation” against them and a GPC plot to “take control of state institutions”.

In response, Saleh said he had sent two letters to Abdel Malek al-Houthi, head of the militia group, to reassure him.

“I asked him not to believe the suspicions, and he reacted positively,” he added.

Cracks emerged in the alliance between Saleh and Houthis after the two publicly accused each other of treason and back-stabbing.

In an unprecedented outbreak of violence between the allies on August 26, a colonel loyal to Saleh and two militias were killed.

Saleh ruled Yemen with an iron fist for more than three decades before stepping down in 2012 after a bloody, year-long uprising.

But the strongman retained the loyalty of some of the best-equipped units in the military and later joined forces with the Houthis, after they overran the capital in 2014.













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