Yemen’s Houthi militia seized the president’s chief of staff on Saturday (January 17) and threatened further steps to derail a proposed new constitution in a wrangle for power that threatens to bring down the government.
The draft constitution was formally launched on Saturday and aims to resolve big regional, political and sectarian differences in Yemen by devolving authority to the regions.
But it has been bitterly opposed by the Houthis who fear it will dilute their power.
Western and Gulf countries worry about insecurity in Yemen because of its border with top oil exporter Saudi Arabia and the presence of an al Qaeda wing that has claimed responsibility for the attack on satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo in Paris.
Political chaos has accelerated since the Houthis seized Sanaa in September and advanced into central and western areas where Sunni Muslims predominate.
The group said its gunmen “arrested” Ahmed Awad bin Mubarak, office director for President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi and a former nominee for prime minister, early on Saturday to stop him attending a meeting on the constitution.
In a statement on the al-Maseerah television channel, the militia said it had become aware of “irregularities” in both the draft constitution and how the government is attempting to make it law.
Houthi representatives also pulled out of a meeting with Hadi and the country’s other main political and regional factions to discuss the constitution, two attendees at the meeting told Reuters.
The new charter is the result of talks between Yemen’s competing factions aimed at smoothing a political transition triggered by the departure of former leader Ali Abdullah Saleh who stepped down in 2012 after a year of street protests.
However, its proposal to divide Yemen into six federal regions is opposed by the Houthis, now the strongest group in the country, who instead support a plan by southern separatists for just two regions.
Scores of people have already been killed in 2015 in al Qaeda attacks and clashes between the Houthis and Sunni militants and tribesmen.
Reuters