SANA’A: Gunmen shot dead three people in a failed attempt to assassinate a Houthi rebel leader yesterday after he left Yemen’s “national dialogue” talks aimed at ending political turmoil in the country, sources at the talks said.
Abdo Abu Ras, the Houthis’ representative at the negotiations, was returning by car to his hotel in the capital Sana’a when gunmen opened fire, killing three of his companions, the sources said.
Impoverished Yemen faces two rebellions and a separatist movement. Washington fears it may become a failed state after President Ali Abdullah Saleh was unseated last year following “Arab spring” protests.
Lawless parts of the country bordering top oil producer Saudi Arabia play host to an al Qaeda affiliate seen in the United States as the movement’s most dangerous wing.
The Houthi rebels, who advocate a bigger role for Zaydi Shi’ite Muslims in the north of Yemen, have been fighting the government since 2004 and form one of several rival groups taking part in the talks.
“What we fear is that there will (also) be a plot to target the southerners to make them withdraw from participating in the conference.”
Separatists who want to revive a defunct socialist state in the south are taking part in the talks, as are leaders of the 2011 street protests, Saleh’s General People’s Congress party and the Islah party, representing Islamist and tribal groups.
President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi’s transitional two-year government, whose term ends after elections next February, is also battling an insurgency by Islamists in parts of southern Yemen. Those militants are not taking part in the talks.
Reuters