Yemen government, to sign power-sharing deal

Yemen’s internationally recognized government
will sign an agreement with southern separatists on Tuesday aimed at ending a
conflict simmering within the country’s long-running civil war, Yemeni and
Saudi officials said.
The power-sharing deal would see the
secessionist Southern Transitional Council (STC) handed a number of ministries,
and the government return to the main southern city of Aden, according to
officials and Saudi media reports on Saturday.
Yemeni Information Minister Muammar Al-Iryani
tweeted that an official signing ceremony for the “Riyadh Agreement” would take
place in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday in the presence of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed
bin Salman and Yemeni President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi.
Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed
Al-Nahyan will represent the United Arab Emirates, the main partner in the
Saudi-led coalition backing Hadi’s government, Saudi ambassador to Yemen
Mohammed Al-Jaber tweeted.
The Security Belt Forces — dominated by the
STC — in August took control of Aden, which had served as the beleaguered
government’s base since it was ousted from the capital Sanaa by Iran-backed
Houthi rebels in 2014.
The clashes between the separatists and
unionist supporters of the government, who for years fought on the same side
against the Houthis, had raised fears the country could break apart entirely.
In recent weeks the government and the
separatists have been holding discreet indirect talks mediated by Saudi Arabia
in the kingdom’s western city of Jeddah.
Sources on both sides have said that the
parties struck a power-sharing deal.
Saudi Arabia’s Al-Ekhbariya state television
has reported a government of 24 ministers would be formed, “divided equally
between the southern and northern provinces of Yemen.” Under the deal, the
Yemeni prime minister would return to Aden to “reactivate state institutions,”
it added.
Al-Ekhbariya said the Saudi-led coalition
would oversee a “joint committee” to implement the agreement.