Source: Yemen's Fugitive FM Seeking More US Aid for Mansour Hadi
"The Riyadh government has asked Al-Makhlafi to
meet the US envoy in Yemen in a bid to find a way to hold talks with
other Yemeni political parties," a Yemeni diplomatic source told FNA
today.
He noted that Al-Makhlafi fully briefed the US
ambassador on the Saudi-led Arab coalition's military operations against
the Yemeni forces.
"The US ambassador also told Al-Makhlafi he will
do his best to help those who are on the same side with Saudi Arabia on
Yemen within a military, intelligence and strategic framework," the
source added.
In a relevant development in late January, media
reports said that Mansour Hadi was planning to leave the city of Aden
for Riyadh.
"Hadi will travel to Riyadh to meet Saudi King
Salman and review the latest battlefield conditions in the war," the
Arabic-language Okaz newspaper quoted Hadi's press secretary Mokhtar
al-Rahbi as saying.
This is the third time that Hadi leaves Aden for Riyadh over past few months.
In a relevant development in late December, the
Hadi's palace in Aden became under the siege of his opponent forces and
he was most likely to flee Yemen.
A newly-formed militant group calling itself
'Southern Yemen's Resistance Forces' have besieged Hadi's place of
residence in Aden, Arab media outlets reported on December 23.
Political analysts speculate that the siege of
Hadi's palace had taken place with the green light of the United Arab
Emirates as a result of a row between the UAE and Saudi Arabia over Hadi
and his Prime Minister Khaled Bahah.
The speculations came as the UAE Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Zayed had recently met the leaders of Southern Yemen,
including a senior Yemeni Salafi leader Hani bin Barik, in Abu Dhabi.
Political observers believe that the quarrel
between Hadi and his prime minister derives from the underlying row
between Saudi Arabia as supporter of Hadi and UAE as supporter of Bahah.
Aden province has been the scene of numerous
attacks against pro-Hadi forces; the latest case was assassination of
Aden governor Ja'afar Saeed.
Hadi and Bahah have been running a feud for the
past several months, and their differences grew noisy when a number of
Saudi officials worked out a plan to replace the former president with
his premier - who had both fled to Saudi Arabia then - in order to
encourage the revolutionary forces back in Yemen to work with him and
allow him to start a new government.
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