Yemeni separatists announce disputed ‘dissolution’

Published January 10, 2026
Police troopers patrol a street after, according to the Saudi-backed coalition, Aidarous al-Zubaidi, the leader of Yemen’s Southern Transitional Council (STC), fled to an unknown destination, in Aden, Yemen January 7, 2026. — Reuters
Police troopers patrol a street after, according to the Saudi-backed coalition, Aidarous al-Zubaidi, the leader of Yemen’s Southern Transitional Council (STC), fled to an unknown destination, in Aden, Yemen January 7, 2026. — Reuters

RIYADH: A delegation of Yemeni separatists allegedly held in Riyadh said on Friday they had to dissolve their movement after a failed land grab that infuriated Saudi Arabia, but the announcement was dismissed as made under duress by their colleagues based in the UAE.

Southern Transitional Council secretary general Abdulrahman al Subaihi, part of a high-level delegation that the STC alleges has been “arbitrarily detained” by Saudi authorities, read a prepared statement on Saudi TV.

The announcement escalates a rapidly evolving situation after the STC’s offensive in southern Yemen was put down by Saudi Arabia.

“We announce the dissolution of the Southern Transitional Council,” said the statement, which was also carried by the Saudi-sponsored Yemeni government’s news agency.

It pledged their “commitment to working towards achieving our just southern goal through preparations for a comprehensive southern conference under the auspices of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia”.

Saudi officials have not commented on the group’s status. Other Yemeni officials shown in the TV footage, sitting behind long tables in a conference room, appeared sombre.

But STC officials outside Saudi Arabia signalled that the move had been made under duress.

STC vice president Hani bin Breik, who is based in the United Arab Emirates capital Abu Dhabi, slammed the announcement in a statement on X as a “political farce”.

He said the decision was taken “under pressure and coercion by an STC team shackled by the restrictions of house arrest”.

Saudi consolidation

STC spokesman Anwar al Tamimi, who is also in Abu Dhabi, dismissed the statement as “ridiculous” in a message, while another STC statement dismissed the dissolution and called for the delegation to be freed.

“Decisions concerning the Southern Transitional Council can only be made by the council in its entirety, under the chairmanship of the president,” the statement said.

“This will take place immediately upon the release of the Southern Transitional Council delegation currently in Riyadh.”

The announcement from Riyadh appears to be an attempt to consolidate Saudi control in south Yemen. The STC “was Abu Dhabi’s largest political and military investment in Yemen”, according to Mohammed al Basha of the US-based risk advisory Basha Report.

Subaihi is among a 50-plus delegation that has been incommunicado since arriving in Riyadh in the early hours of Wednesday, according to other STC officials.

The delegation was summoned to Riyadh after the STC seized swathes of south Yemen territory last month before being repelled by Saudi warplanes and pro-Saudi forces.

Zubaidi skips talks

The STC announcement echoes another incident in 2017 when Lebanon’s prime minister Saad Hariri resigned in a televised address from Riyadh, where he was speculated to be under house arrest.

After French intervention, Hariri returned to Lebanon and rescinded his resignation.

Published in Dawn, January 10th, 2026

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