20 Apr 2024
Thursday 26 March 2015 - 16:14
Story Code : 156253

Senior Houthi member gunned down in Yemeni capital

Senior Houthi member gunned down in Yemeni capital
[caption id="attachment_156255" align="alignright" width="228"]File photo shows Abdul Karim al-Khiwani, a senior member of Yemens Ansarullah movement, who was assassinated in front of his home in the capital Sanaa on March 18, 2015. File photo shows Abdul Karim al-Khiwani, a senior member of Yemens Ansarullah movement, who was assassinated in front of his home in the capital Sanaa on March 18, 2015.[/caption]

Unidentified gunmen have assassinated a senior member of YemensHouthi movement in the capital, Sanaa.

Security officials confirmed Wednesday that Abdul Karim al-Khiwani was attacked by gunmen on a motorbike earlier in the day.

Khiwani wasa member of the Ansarullah movements Revolutionary Committeein charge of administering the affairs of the capital, Sanaa.

Al-Massira television channel, which is run by the Houthis, confirmed the death of the senior leader. Another leading member of the Houthis, Mohamed al-Bekheiti, said the assassination took place on Sanaa Street, where Khiwanis house is located.

Mohamed al-Khiwani, the son of the slain leader, said armed men left his father in a pool of blood in front of his home and escaped. He was transferred to hospital but died of excessive bleeding.

Abdul Karim al-Khiwani, also a top journalist and a respected writer, was a representative of Ansarullah movement in the UN-sponsored national talks which concluded January last year. The meetings ended in a peace plan which divided Yemen into six federative regions. Houthis strongly opposed the initiative and continued fighting until they took control of the capital in September.

No group has yet claimed responsibility for Khiwanis assassination, although some analysts believe that forces loyal to Yemeni fugitive President Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi (shown below)may have been behind the killing.



Hadi, along with the cabinet of Premier Khaled Bahah, stepped down in late January, but the Yemeni parliament did not approve the presidents resignation. He fled his home in Sanaa on February 21 after weeks under effective house arrest and went to Aden, Yemens second largest city, where he officially withdrew his resignation and highlighted his intention to resume duties.

Some Persian Gulf Arab states, including Saudi Arabia, have already relocated their embassies from Sanaa to Aden.

Hadi also called on the Ansarullah revolutionaries to relinquish power and leave Sanaa. The Houthis, however, said Hadi had lost his legitimacy as head of state and was being sought as a fugitive from justice.

By Press TV
https://theiranproject.com/vdcbs0b8frhbs5p.4eur.html
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