IMAGE: HANI MOHAMMED/ASSOCIATED PRESS
SANAA, Yemen — Tens of thousands of Yemenis marched in protest on Saturday against Shiite rebels who hold the capital, amid a power vacuum in a country that is home to what Washington describes as al-Qaeda’s most dangerous offshoot.
Some 20,000 hit the streets of capital Sanaa, where demonstrators converged on the house of President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, who resigned Thursday along with his cabinet. It was the largest protest since the rebels, known as Houthis, swept into Sanaa in September.
Protesters carried banners, and chanted slogans denouncing the rebels and demanding the restoration of the president. Scuffles involving knives and batons broke out in one instance in Sanaa when rebels tried to block one procession, leaving two demonstrators and one Houthi injured.
“Houthi aggressors, out of the capital,” went one chant, and “Hadi, Hadi, return. Your people are awake,” said another. One slogan accused the Houthis, who adhere to a sect of Shiism, of being clients of mostly Shiite Iran, while another said they were colluding with Hadi’s predecessor, longtime autocrat Ali Abdullah Saleh.
Security officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief reporters, said tens of thousands also demonstrated in the cities of Taiz, Ibb and Dhamar with similar demands.
In Dhamar, protesters formed a human chain, demanding the “restoration of the state.” Many across the country described the Houthi power grab as a “coup.” The Houthis, who say they are fighting corruption, said in a statement Friday night that they would work to bring about a smooth, democratic transfer of power after the resignations.
The Houthis, who captured several cities as they drove south from their northern strongholds last summer, seek greater representation in government ministries and on a committee to rewrite Yemen’s constitution. They now face mounting pressures and internal divisions however, and there have been signs that they do not want to rule the country outright, and would prefer that Hadi remain a figurehead president.
Ali al-Bukhaiti, a prominent member of the group’s political arm, resigned Friday over what he described as a dangerous political polarization that could turn regional and secular, and eventually break up Yemen. He offered to work as a mediator between the groups.
The national parliament meets Sunday to consider Hadi’s resignation. Should it be accepted, or should Hadi simply refuse to rule, law dictates that the job would go to Parliament Speaker Yahia al-Rai — a close Saleh ally.
The United States currently backs Hadi in part because he is seen as an ally in the fight against al-Qaeda.