Yemeni coast guards block ports in protest

Yemeni coast guards block ports in protest
Updated 11 June 2012
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Yemeni coast guards block ports in protest

Yemeni coast guards block ports in protest

SANAA/ADEN: Yemeni coast guards blocked ports yesterday to protest against the government’s failure to pay financial benefits they said it had promised, halting most shipping.
Port officials said the guards prevented workers from entering four main ports, including Aden in the south, Hodeidah in the west and the Red Sea ports of Mokha and Saleef.
“Movement has completely stopped in almost all ports,” Sharaf Mohammed, a ship captain at Hodeidah.
Yemen has slipped into a state of chaos during a year of unrest. Former President Ali Abdullah Saleh has been ousted after 33 years of rule and replaced by his deputy, Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, under a deal brokered by Yemen’s rich Gulf neighbors.
The army is pushing ahead with campaign to retake towns seized by militants linked to Al-Qaeda during the upheaval.
In Zinjibar, capital of southern Abyan province, where the army has been fighting the militants for more than a month, at least five militants were killed in battles yesterday with government forces, an official and residents said.
Another four fighters were killed and two soldiers wounded outside the town of Jaar, military officials and residents of the area said. They said there had been air strikes on targets including a factory used by fighters as a base.
Separately, at least one soldier and one member of the southern secessionist movement were killed during clashes yesterday in the southern province of Dalea, the Defense Ministry and southern activists said.
The ministry said in a text message that members of the southern secessionist movement had attacked the soldiers, while the secessionists said the soldiers fired at them without a warning.
The incident comes ahead of a meeting later this month in Cairo between Yemeni political leaders and prominent secessionists to prepare for a national dialogue scheduled for August.
The dialogue is an element of the Saudi and US-backed transition deal that removed Saleh from office this year in a bid to avert civil war.South Yemen was formerly a separate state whose 1990 union with the north collapsed into civil war four years later.