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Huthi rebels absent as Yemeni parties gather in Riyadh

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Yemen's exiled President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi was to open a conference of political parties from his war-torn country on Sunday but Iran-backed Huthi Shiite rebels are boycotting the talks.

The Huthis, who are fighting forces loyal to Hadi and have seized large parts of the country including the capital, want talks to be held in Yemen and are staying away from the meeting of about 400 delegates in Riyadh.

The Huthis have long complained of marginalisation and fought six wars with the central government between 2004 and 2010, before launching a sweeping advance from their northern stronghold last year.

Their southward push forced Hadi to flee to Riyadh and prompted a Saudi-led coalition to launch air strikes against the Huthis, who are allied with fighters loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh.

The Riyadh talks start on the final day of a five-day truce proposed by Saudi Arabia to let vital humanitarian aid into Yemen. Despite the pause, clashes between rebels and pro-government forces have continued on the ground.

Although the Huthis are not participating, Saleh's General People's Congress party "has many of its leaders taking part", Abdulaziz al-Jaber, head of the conference's organising committee, told reporters on Saturday.

He said, however, that "we will not deal with" Saleh or others facing international sanctions.

Saleh, who led the country until 2011, has been on United Nations and US sanctions lists since November.

Jaber said the three-day meeting is "not a dialogue" but a decision-making conference.

"What will happen in Riyadh is an announcement of an agreement that will be binding on all parties present in Riyadh," he said.

Supporters of the Shiite Huthi movement brandish their weapons during a demonstration against the Sa...
Supporters of the Shiite Huthi movement brandish their weapons during a demonstration against the Saudi-led air strikes, in the capital Sanaa on May 8, 2015
Mohammed Huwais, AFP/File

Among the goals of the meeting is working towards a constitution which would be presented to the Yemeni people, "and to hold a referendum to put the results of the dialogue into practice," Jaber said.

"We reassure the people that restoring the state is inevitable."

About 1,600 people, many of them civilians, have been killed since late March and more than 6,200 others have been injured, while around 450,000 Yemenis are internally displaced because of the war, according to the United Nations.

Yemen’s exiled President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi was to open a conference of political parties from his war-torn country on Sunday but Iran-backed Huthi Shiite rebels are boycotting the talks.

The Huthis, who are fighting forces loyal to Hadi and have seized large parts of the country including the capital, want talks to be held in Yemen and are staying away from the meeting of about 400 delegates in Riyadh.

The Huthis have long complained of marginalisation and fought six wars with the central government between 2004 and 2010, before launching a sweeping advance from their northern stronghold last year.

Their southward push forced Hadi to flee to Riyadh and prompted a Saudi-led coalition to launch air strikes against the Huthis, who are allied with fighters loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh.

The Riyadh talks start on the final day of a five-day truce proposed by Saudi Arabia to let vital humanitarian aid into Yemen. Despite the pause, clashes between rebels and pro-government forces have continued on the ground.

Although the Huthis are not participating, Saleh’s General People’s Congress party “has many of its leaders taking part”, Abdulaziz al-Jaber, head of the conference’s organising committee, told reporters on Saturday.

He said, however, that “we will not deal with” Saleh or others facing international sanctions.

Saleh, who led the country until 2011, has been on United Nations and US sanctions lists since November.

Jaber said the three-day meeting is “not a dialogue” but a decision-making conference.

“What will happen in Riyadh is an announcement of an agreement that will be binding on all parties present in Riyadh,” he said.

Supporters of the Shiite Huthi movement brandish their weapons during a demonstration against the Sa...

Supporters of the Shiite Huthi movement brandish their weapons during a demonstration against the Saudi-led air strikes, in the capital Sanaa on May 8, 2015
Mohammed Huwais, AFP/File

Among the goals of the meeting is working towards a constitution which would be presented to the Yemeni people, “and to hold a referendum to put the results of the dialogue into practice,” Jaber said.

“We reassure the people that restoring the state is inevitable.”

About 1,600 people, many of them civilians, have been killed since late March and more than 6,200 others have been injured, while around 450,000 Yemenis are internally displaced because of the war, according to the United Nations.

AFP
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