SANAA: Yemen’s southern separatists have decided to suspended their participation in consultations on a power-sharing deal for the south, known as the `Riyadh agreement’, a Southern Transitional Council (STC) statement said on Tuesday.
Saudi Arabia has been trying to implement the deal, first proposed in November, to end a conflict in the south between the separatists and the Saudi-backed Yemeni government.
The government and the separatist STC, which is backed by the UAE, are the main Yemeni forces in a Saudi-led coalition fighting the Iran-aligned Houthi movement which drove the government from Sanaa, the capital, five years ago.
The Yemeni allies have been in a standoff since last August when the STC took over Aden, the temporary headquarters of the government. The `Riyadh agreement’ suffered many setbacks and was never implemented, but Saudi Arabia made a new push in July to invigorate the process.
The STC gave seven reasons for withdrawing, including the collapse of public services in the south and military escalation by government forces in Abyan province.