Yemen's Hadi says no talks until Houthis surrender arms

Yemen's president has raised the bar for dialogue with the Houthis (Ansarallah) controlling Sanaa, saying they must surrender their weapons before the start of any peace talks, AFP reported Wednesday (December 20th).

"We do not have a partner with whom we can reach peace," Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi said at a meeting with a number of ambassadors at his residence in Riyadh on Tuesday night.

The exiled president said dialogue had become impossible after the insurgents gunned down Yemen's former strongman, Ali Abdullah Saleh, who had sought a ceasefire deal with Saudi Arabia.

The president received the ambassadors just hours after the Houthis targeted Riyadh with a ballistic missile -- the second such attack on the Saudi capital in as many months.

"They have proven that they do not tend towards peace ... and any attempt at peace before their weapons are seized is a waste of time," he said.

Hadi in September warned that a military solution was the "most likely" scenario in Yemen but that his government would "continue to extend its hand to peace".

On Tuesday, he issued stark conditions for dialogue: the restoration of his government to power, the surrender of Houthi arms and the handover of state institutions.

Do you like this article?

0 Comment(s)

Comment Policy * Denotes Required Field 1500 / 1500